Thứ Năm, 26 tháng 4, 2018

Auto news on Youtube Apr 27 2018

>> SO GOOD MORNING.

MY NAME IS CARA JAMES AND I WANT TO WELCOME YOU ALL TO OUR FORUM

ON OPIOIDS, WHERE WE'RE TALKING ABOUT STRATEGIES AND SOLUTIONS

FOR ADDRESSING THE EPIDEMIC IN MINORITY COMMUNITIES.

I'M SO PLEASED TO BE HERE AND WITH OUR PANELISTS AND OUR

SPEAKER AND THE SURGEON GENERAL, AS WELL AS EACH OF YOU HERE IN

THE ROOM AND THE MANY OF YOU WHO ARE JOINING US VIRTUALLY TO TALK

ABOUT THIS REALLY IMPORTANT ISSUE, PARTICULARLY IN LIGHT

THAT APRIL IS NATIONAL MINORITY HEALTH MONTH AND OUR THEME IS

PARTNERING TO ACHIEVE HEALTH EQUITY, WHICH ALSO PARALLELS THE

MOTTO OF OUR KEYNOTE SPEAKER, WHO TALKS ABOUT BETTER HEALTH

THROUGH PARTNERSHIPS. AS WE THINK ABOUT WHERE WE ARE,

WE'VE SEEN THE STORIES NATIONALLY ABOUT THE IMPACT OF

THE EPIDEMIC ACROSS THE COUNTRY WITH MORE THAN 42,000 OPIOID

DEATHS OCCURRING IN 2016. LESS SO IS THE IMPACT THAT IT'S

HAVING IN RACIAL MINORITY COMMUNITIES AND WHY WE'RE HERE

TODAY TO TALK ABOUT THE IMPACT OF THE EPIDEMIC.

IN 2016, AMONG THOSE 42,000 DEATHS, 20% OF THEM OCCURRED IN

PEOPLE OF COLOR. AND WHILE THAT'S LESS THAN THE

PROPORTION OF THE POPULATION WHO IS A PERSON OF COLOR, IT'S

ACTUALLY AN INCREASE IN WHAT WE'VE SEEN OVER 2015.

AND WE KNOW THAT THE EPIDEMIC IS CHANGING, MOVING TO A LITTLE BIT

MORE OF AN URBAN AREA, WHERE WE HAVE MANY MORE DIVERSE

POPULATION. AND AS WE THINK ABOUT THIS, IT'S

IMPORTANT FOR US TO THINK ABOUT WHAT ARE THOSE SOLUTIONS.

WE KNOW THAT ACROSS OUR HAD HEALTH SPECTRUM, ONE SIZE

DOESN'T FIT ALL. AND WHEN WE THINK ABOUT WHAT THE

UNIQUE CHALLENGES AND NEEDS OF OUR COMMUNITIES OF COLOR AND HOW

WE CAN ADDRESS THE EPIDEMIC, THAT'S ONE OF THE REASONS WE'RE

SO GLAD TO BE HERE TODAY TO LIFT THAT UP, TO SHARE STORIES OF

HOPE AND SOLUTIONS AND TO BRAINSTORM WITH YOU ABOUT WHAT

WE CAN DO TO ADDRESS THIS CRISIS.

WE'RE ALSO PLEASED TO BE DOING THIS IN PARTNERSHIP WITH OUR

COLLEAGUES AT SAMHSA AND THE OFFICE OF BEHAVIORAL HEALTH

EQUITY, IN PARTNERSHIP WITH US TODAY FOR THIS IMPORTANT TOPIC.

SO WITHOUT FURTHER ADO, I'M GOING TO INTRODUCE DR. JEROME

ADAMS, THE 20TH SURGEON GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES, AND A

BOARD CERTIFIED ANESTHESIOLOGIST.

WE'RE GOING TO HEAR FROM HIM, THEN WE'RE GOING TO MOVE INTO A

DISCUSSION WITH SOME OF OUR SPEAKERS, WHO ARE GOING TO

REFLECT BOTH WHAT'S HAPPENING AT THE CLINICAL LEVEL, PERSONAL

LEVEL, AS WELL AS WHAT WE'RE DOING IN OUR DEPARTMENTS TO

FRAME THE ISSUE FOR US AND HOW WE CAN MOVE FORWARD AND THEN

ENGAGE WITH THE CONVERSATION. WE WANT TO ENGAGE WITH YOU AS

WELL, SO FOR THOSE OF YOU WHO ARE JOINING US VIRTUALLY, WE

HAVE QUESTIONS THAT YOU CAN EMAIL US REGARDING THE CMS

STUDIO AND -- SORRY, THE HHS STUDIO, THERE WAS A SLIDE A

MINUTE AGO, BUT YOU CAN EMAIL QUESTIONS TO US AND WE'LL WORK

THOSE IN TO THE DISCUSSION. SO AS I SAID, DR. JEROME ADAMS

IS THE 20TH SURGEON GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES, AND HE'S A

BOARD CERTIFIED ANESTHESIOLOGIST WHO SERVED IN INDIANA STATE

HEALTH COMMISSIONER FROM 2014 FROM 2017.

DR. ADAMS IS A MARYLAND NATIVE WITH BACHELOR'S DEGREE IN

BIOCHEMISTRY AND PSYCHOLOGY FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND

BALTIMORE COUNTY AS WELL AS A MASTER'S DEGREE IN PUBLIC HEALTH

FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT BERKLEY AND A

MEDICAL DEGREE FROM INDIANA UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE.

AS I MENTIONED, HIS MOTTO IS "BETTER HEALTH THROUGH BETTER

PARTNERSHIPS," AND LOOKING FORWARD TO TALKING TO HIM AND

HEARING WHAT HE HAS TO SAY ABOUT HOW WE CAN ADDRESS THIS EPIDEMIC

IN MINORITY COMMUNITIES. DR. ADAMS?

[APPLAUSE] >> WELL, GOOD MORNING, EVERYONE.

>> GOOD MORNING. >> ALL RIGHT.

WELL, IT'S GOOD TO BE HERE TODAY, AND I'M REALLY IMPRESSED

AT THE FOLKS IN THE ROOM. FOR THE FOLKS WITH US VIRTUALLY,

WELCOME. WHAT YOU MAY NOT REALIZE

VIRTUALLY IS THAT THE FRENCH PRESIDENT IS IN TOWN, AND JUST

DROVE RIGHT BY HHS, FOLKS WHO WERE HERE IN THIS ROOM HAD TO

FIGHT THROUGH SECRET SERVICE AND ALSO SOME OTHER SHENANIGANS TO

GET HERE, REALLY A HEROIC EFFORT.

THANK YOU, DR. JAMES, FOR YOUR KIND INTRODUCTION AND FOR YOUR

LEADERSHIP, JUST REALLY APPRECIATE HOW KIND YOU'VE BEEN

TO OUR OFFICE AND THE GREAT WORK YOU'VE DONE TO ADDRESS

DISPARITIES AND EQUITY ACROSS THE COUNTRY.

THANK YOU ALL FOR TAKING THE TIME OUT OF YOUR BUSY SCHEDULES

TO JOIN US AT THIS VERY IMPORTANT FORUM ON BEHAVIORAL

HEALTH AND OPIOIDS. I'M REALLY EXCITED FOR THE

PANELISTS. WE HAD A GREAT DISCUSSION

BRIEFLY BEFORE WE CAME IN. DRS. SMITH, COOK AND CHOO AND

LEAH HILL. I WAS JUST BLOWN AWAY IN THE

SHORT A TIME I HAD WITH THEM, SO I KNOW YOU'RE GOING TO BE

REALLY, REALLY IMPRESSED WITH THE INTERACTION THAT WE HAVE ON

THE PANEL. I SPECIFICALLY WANT TO THANK THE

OFFICES OF MINORITY HEALTH FROM BOTH CMS AND THE OVERALL OFFICE

OF MINORITY HEALTH AND DR. LINN FOR BRINGING TOGETHER SUCH A

GREAT GROUP OF INDIVIDUALS. I WAS SO GLAD TO HEAR THAT THE

THEME FOR THIS YEAR'S NATIONAL MINORITY HEALTH MONTH IS

"PARTNERING FOR HEALTH EQUITY." AS YOU ALL KNOW AND DR. JAMES

POINTED OUT, STRENGTHENING RELATIONSHIPS IS IMPORTANT TO ME

AND IS KEY TO IMPROVING HEALTH. AND I COMMEND YOU ALL FOR

EMBRACING THE IDEA, THE CONCEPT OF BETTER HEALTH FOR BETTER

PARTNERSHIPS. I WANT TO SHARE WITH YOU TWO

QUICK PERSONAL STORIES, ONE WHICH SHOWS THE BAD AND ONE

WHICH SHOWS THE GOOD IN TERMS OF ADDRESSING DISPARITIES AND

INEQUITY. AS MANY OF YOU KNOW BY NOW, MY

OWN BROTHER PHILIP IS CURRENTLY SERVING A 10-YEAR PRISON

SENTENCE ABOUT 10 MILES FROM HERE.

HE HAD UNRECOGNIZED MENTAL HEALTH ISSUES WHEN HE WAS

YOUNGER THAT TURNED INTO SELF MEDICATION WITH ALCOHOL,

TOBACCO, MARIJUANA, ONE DAY SOMEONE GAVE HIM SOME PILLS.

AND HE FOUND THAT THAT DID A BETTER JOB AT A ANYTHING ELSE TO

HELPING TO SUPPRESS SOME OF THOSE FEELINGS OF ANXIETY AND

DEPRESSION THAT HE HAD. THAT QUICKLY TURNED INTO

ADDICTION AND TO ILLICIT SUBSTANCES.

HE STOLE $200 TO SUPPORT HIS ADDICTION AND WAS GIVEN A

10-YEAR PRISON SENTENCE. THERE ARE SO MANY POINTS ALONG

THAT PATHWAY THAT WE AS A SOCIETY COULD HAVE INTERVENED.

BUT STIGMA GOT IN THE WAY. IF WE'RE GOING TO BE HONEST

ABOUT IT, THE WAY THAT WE TREAT MINORITIES RELATIVE TO THE REST

OF SOCIETY GOT IN THE WAY. THE LACK OF RESOURCES AND ACCESS

TO THOSE RESOURCES GOT IN THE WAY.

IT REALLY IS AN EXAMPLE OF A SYSTEM FAILURE.

HIS BROTHER WAS A PHYSICIAN. WAS THE HEAD OF THE INDIANA

STATE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH. THE UNITED STATES SURGEON

GENERAL. AND WITH ALL THAT IN HIS FAVOR,

IF WE COULDN'T PREVENT HIM FROM GOING DOWN THAT PATHWAY, THEN IT

SHOWS YOU THAT THE SYSTEM REALLY IS FAILING US.

AND SOME OF YOU HEARD ME SAY THIS BEFORE, I DON'T SHARE HIS

STORY TO TUG ON YOUR HEART STRINGS.

I SHARE HIS STORY BECAUSE FROM A VERY PRAGMATIC POINT OF VIEW, IT

COSTS BETWEEN 100 AND $200 A DAY TO INCARCERATE SOMEONE.

TIMES 365 DAYS A YEAR TIMES 10 MEANS THAT EACH AND EVERY ONE OF

YOU AS A TAXPAYER IS GOING TO CONTRIBUTE TO THE HALF A MILLION

TO A MILLION DOLLARS IT'S GOING TO COST TO INCARCERATE HIM.

VERSUS HAVING INTERVENED EARLIER AND SPENT A COUPLE HUNDRED OR

EVEN A COUPLE THOUSAND DOLLARS TO HAVE GOTTEN HIM THE TREATMENT

THAT HE NEEDED. AGAIN, I'M NOT TALKING TO YOU

FROM AN EMOTIONAL STANDPOINT. I'M SAYING IF YOU WANT MORE

MONEY IN YOUR WALLET, IF YOU WANT MORE MONEY TO BE ABLE TO

SPEND ON THE THINGS THAT ARE IMPORTANT TO YOU AND TO YOUR

COMMUNITIES, WE'VE GOT TO DO A BETTER JOB, WE'VE GOT TO CORRECT

THESE SYSTEM FAILURES. ON THE FLIP SIDE, I WANT TO

SHARE WITH YOU AN EXPERIENCE I HAD IN INDIANA.

INDIANA HAS GOT -- WELL, AS A MANY OF YOU ALL KNOW, THE UNITED

STATES IS AMONGST THE WORST DEVELOPED COUNTRIES FOR INFANT

MORTALITY. INDIANA IS ONE OF THE WORST

STATES WITHIN ONE OF THE WORST COUNTRIES IN REGARDS TO INFANT

MORTALITY. AND WITHIN THAT TERRIBLE

STATISTIC, THERE'S THE FACT THAT WE HAVE DISPARITIES THAT EXIST,

BLACK TO WHITE DISPARITIES. INDIANA HAD TERRIBLE BLACK TO

WHITE INFANT MORTALITY RATIOS. AND ONE OF THE THINGS I'M MOST

PROUD OF DURING MY TIME IN INDIANA WAS BEING ABLE TO HELP

DELIVER $13 MILLION TO ADDRESS INFANT MORTALITY IN THAT STATE.

HOW DID I DO IT? I DID IT BY PARTNERING, BY GOING

TO COMMUNITIES, MANY OF WHICH WERE MOSTLY OR ALL WHITE, AND

HELPING THEM UNDERSTAND THAT ADDRESSING INEQUITY AND

DISPARITY ISN'T JUST BLACK OR WHITE ISSUE, IT ISN'T JUST ABOUT

THE LANGUAGE YOU SPEAK. IT'S ABOUT COMMUNITY PROSPERITY,

IT'S ABOUT URBAN VERSUS RURAL DISPARITY, IT'S ABOUT SHOWING

EVERYONE HOW THEY FIT UNDER THE EQUITY UMBRELLA.

IF WE CAN DO THAT, THEN WE CAN TURN AROUND THE STORY FOR MY

BROTHER AND FOR SO MANY OF THE FOLKS WHO WE'RE FIGHTING FOR.

HEALTH DISPARITY IS PREVALENT ACROSS AND WITHIN POPULATIONS.

AFRICAN-AMERICAN WOMEN ARE 18 TIMES AS LIKELY TO DIE FROM HIV

AND AIDS AS WHITE CHILDREN. SUICIDE DEATH RATES FOR AMERICAN

INDIAN AND ALASKAN NATIVE ADOLESCENTS ARE 2.3 TIMES AS

HIGH AS WHITE ADOLESCENTS. ASIAN AMERICAN AND PACIFIC

ISLANDERS REPRESENT HALF OF ALL PEOPLE WITH HEPATITIS B DESPITE

MAKING UP ONLY 5% OF THE POPULATION.

THESE ARE CRITICAL CHALLENGES FOR RACIAL AND ETHNIC MINORITIES

AND FOR THE NATION AT LARGE BECAUSE AGAIN, WE'RE

OVERSPENDING ON THE BACK END TO CORRECT THOSE DISPARITIES

INSTEAD OF PREEMPTIVELY ADDRESSING THEM ON THE FRONT

END. WE'RE HERE TODAY TO TALK ABOUT

OPIOIDS. WE KNOW THAT FROM 2010 TO 2014,

RATES OF HEROIN OVERDOSE INCREASED BY 213% FOR BLACKS,

137% FOR HISPANICS AND LATINOS, AND 236% FOR NATIVE AMERICANS.

WE KNOW THAT IN THE TIME THE WHITE OVERDOSE RATE HAS DOUBLED,

IT HAS TRIPLED FOR AFRICAN-AMERICANS.

AND STIGMA AS I MENTIONED IS A CONTRIBUTING FACTOR.

BOTH FOR THE INDIVIDUAL AND FOR THE FAMILIES AND SUPPORTS OF

THOSE INDIVIDUALS. FOR THE PHYSICIANS WHO WANT TO

TREAT THOSE INDIVIDUALS. FOR OUR PAYMENT SYSTEMS.

STIGMA SEEPS INTO EVERYTHING THAT WE DO.

FOLKS OFTEN ASK ME, YOU KNOW, ARE YOU CONCERNED THAT FOLKS ARE

PAYING ATTENTION TO THE OPIOID EPIDEMIC NOW THAT WHITE PEOPLE

ARE DYING IN RURAL AMERICA? WELL, AS I'VE SAID TO MANY

AUDIENCES, WE'VE BEEN TRYING FOR YEARS, FOR DECADES, AND SOME OF

YOU FOR MOST OF YOUR LIVES TO GET PEOPLE TO PAY ATTENTION TO

BEHAVIORAL HEALTH, TO ADDICTION AND TO THE DISPARITIES THAT

EXIST. WE NOW HAVE A TREMENDOUS

OPPORTUNITY BECAUSE THE COUNTRY IS PAYING ATTENTION.

THEY'RE WILLING TO TALK ABOUT SOCIAL DETERMINANTS, THEY'RE

WILLING TO TALK ABOUT ACES. SO WHILE WE DON'T WANT TO FORGET

WHAT HAPPENED IN THE PAST, WE WANT TO LEARN FROM WHAT HAPPENED

IN THE PAST. I WANT US TO LOOK FORWARD, I

WANT US TO USE THIS OPPORTUNITY TO HAVE THAT DISCUSSION.

BECAUSE OUT OF THIS TRAGEDY THAT IS THE NATIONAL OPIOID EPIDEMIC,

THERE IS A TREMENDOUS OPPORTUNITY IF WE CAN FOCUS ON

MAKING SURE FUNDING OR PROGRAMS ARE APPLIED IN AN EQUITABLE

PROCESS. HERE AT HHS WE'RE LEADING THE

WAY AS A NATION RESPONSE TO THE OPIOID EPIDEMIC AND ATTEMPTS TO

ADDRESS DISPARITIES. WE'RE ADDRESSING

OVERPRESCRIBING, ILLICIT DRUG SUPPLIES, INSUFFICIENT ACCESS TO

EVIDENCE-BASED TREATMENT, PRIMARY PREVENTION AND RECOVERY

SUPPORT SERVICES. IT'S IMPORTANT THAT FOLKS IN

THIS ROOM KNOW THAT THERE'S A PERSON DYING OF AN OPIOID

OVERDOSE EVERY 12.5 MINUTES AND SHOCKINGLY, THE MAJORITY OF

THOSE INDIVIDUALS ARE DYING AT HOME.

THAT'S WHY I ISSUED THE FIRST SURGEON ADVISORY IN OVER 10

YEARS EARLIER THIS MONTH, HELPING RAISE AWARENESS ABOUT

NALOXONE, A MEDICATION WHICH CAN REVERSE THE EFFECT OF AN OPIOID

OVERDOSE, AND ENCOURAGING FOLKS TO CONSIDER CARRYING NALOXONE IF

YOU OR A LOVED ONE IS AT RISK. I WANT EVERYONE IN THE ROOM AND

EVERYONE VIRTUALLY TO KNOW THAT ANYONE CAN BE A LIFE SAVER, AND

THAT ANYONE CAN USE THAT OPPORTUNITY TO CONNECT FOLKS TO

TREATMENT AND TO RECOVERY AND TO HAVE A CONVERSATION ABOUT

PREVENTION. I WANT TO CLOSE BY STATING THAT

EVERY ONE YOU HAVE IN THIS ROOM AND EVERY ONE OF US WITH US

VIRTUALLY IS SEEN AS A LEADER IN YOUR COMMUNITY.

THAT MEANS YOU HAVE NOT ONLY AN OPPORTUNITY BUT A RESPONSIBILITY

TO LEAD BY EXAMPLE. IT IS IMPERATIVE THAT WE ALL USE

OPPORTUNITIES LIKE WE HAVE TODAY TO USE PLATFORMS TO MAXIMUM

EFFECT AND THAT STARTS WITH HUMILITY AND IT STARTS WITH

SERVANT LEADERSHIP. I LEAVE YOU TODAY WITH A FEW

CHALLENGES. A FEW CALLS TO ACTION.

IF YOU OR SOMEONE YOU KNOW IS AT RISK FOR AN OVERDOSE, CARRY AND

KNOW HOW TO USE NALOXONE, AN EASY TO USE AND LIFE SAVING

MEDICATION THAT CAN REVERSE THE EFFECTS OF OVERDOSE.

SECOND, I CHALLENGE YOU TO SHARE YOUR STORY ON

CRISISNEXTDOOR.GOV. I'VE SHARED MY STORY WITH YOU

TODAY. THERE ARE MANY FOLKS WHO HAVE

SHARED THEIR STORIES ON THAT WEBSITE AND AS LEAH AND I

DISCUSSED EARLIER ARE THIS MORNING, THE ONLY WAY WE'RE

GOING TO TURN AROUND STIGMA IS BY HELPING FOLKS SEE THAT THERE

IS NO MORE "US" AND THEN BECAUSE THAT'S WHAT STIGMA IS, WHEN YOU

TAKE A GROUP OF PEOPLE AND DIVIDE THEM INTO US AND THEM.

US AND THEM IS OVER. THIS OPIOID EPIDEMIC IS

AFFECTING ALL OF US AND MORTGAGE THAT PEOPLE CAN SEE THAT, AND

THE MORE THAT PEOPLE CAN SEE STORIES OF RECOVERY SUCH AS

LEAH'S, THE MORE WE WILL BE ABLE TO REALLY SEE ADDICTION FOR WHAT

IT IS AND THAT IS A CHRONIC DISEASE THAT CAN BE TREATED AND

NOT A MORAL FAILING. THEN FINALLY I CHALLENGE YOU TO

THINK ABOUT MY STORY FROM INDIANA ON INFANT MORTALITY.

I DIDN'T GO INTO THOSE WHITE COMMUNITIES AND SAY BLACK BABIES

ARE DYING. I SAID INFANT MORTALITY AFFECTS

ALL OF US, IT AFFECTS URBAN COMMUNITIES AND RURAL

COMMUNITIES. IT AFFECTS PEOPLE WHO ARE POOR

AND PEOPLE WHO ARE RICH. AND IF WE CAN ADDRESS INFANT

MORTALITY IN A MEANINGFUL WAY, IT WILL LIFT US ALL U WE NEED

TO DO THAT WITH THE OPIOID EPIDEMIC.

THINK ABOUT HOW TO BE A MORE EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATOR BECAUSE

THE FACT IS WE KNOW WHAT TO DO, WE'VE GOT THE EVIDENCE, WE'VE

GOT TO HELP PEOPLE UNDERSTAND THEIR ROLE IN DOING IT.

IF WE DON'T RECOGNIZE THAT REALITY, IF WE DON'T CARE THAT

IN MANY CASES WE'RE IN A FOREIGN LAND SPEAKING A FOREIGN LANGUAGE

LIKE WHEN I GO TO THOSE RURAL ALL-WHITE COMMUNITIES TO TALK

ABOUT OPIOIDS OR TO TALK ABOUT INFANT MORTALITY, THEN WE'RE NOT

GOING TO GET OUR MESSAGE ACROSS AND WE'RE GOING TO CONTINUE TO

SUFFER FROM STIGMA. MY MOTTO IS BETTER HEALTH

THROUGH BETTER PARTNERSHIPS BECAUSE NO MATTER WHAT AREA OF

PUBLIC HEALTH YOU'RE PASSIONATE ABOUT, IF YOU COMMIT TO FORGING

BETTER PARTNERSHIPS, BETTER HEALTH IS SURE TO FOLLOW.

I'VE SEEN IT THROUGHOUT MY CAREER, I'VE SEEN IT IN INDIANA,

I'VE SEEN IT IN THE OPERATING ROOM AS AN ANESTHESIOLOGIST AND

AS THE UNITED STATES SURGEON GENERAL.

THANK YOU AGAIN TO THE OFFICE OF MINORITY HEALTH AND TO ALL OF

YOU FOR GATHERING SUCH A DIVERSE GROUP OF INDIVIDUALS TO

COLLABORATE WITH ONE ANOTHER. IT'S BEEN A PLEASURE TO ADDRESS

YOU ALL, AND I AM SO LOOKING FORWARD TO THE PANEL AND I

TREASURE THE OPPORTUNITY TO BE YOUR SURGEON GENERAL AS WE

TALKED ABOUT EARLIER TO BLOCK FOR YOU GUYS SO THAT YOU CAN RUN

THE BALL INTO THE END ZONE BECAUSE WE'VE GOT AN

OPPORTUNITY, WE'VE GOT A MANDATE TO WIN THIS GAME, IF WE ALL

FIGURE OUT OUR ROLES WHERE WE CAN BE VALUABLE ON THE FIELD AND

PLAY OUR PARTS. THANK YOU SO MUCH.

[APPLAUSE] >> THANK YOU VERY MUCH, SURGEON

GENERAL ADAMS, FOR THOSE VERY INSPIRING WORDS.

I THINK IT MOTIVATES ALL OF US TO GET ON THE PLAYING FIELD AND

BLOCK AND WORK WITH EACH OTHER. GOOD MORNING.

I'M LARKE HUANG, THE DIRECTOR OF THE OFFICE OF BEHAVIORAL HEALTH

EQUITY AT THE SUBSTANCE ABUSE AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICE

ADMINISTRATION. WE'RE VERY PLEASED TO PARTNER

WITH DR. JAMES AND HER TEAM AT THE CMS, OFFICE OF MINORITY

HEALTH, ON THIS FORUM. I HAVE THE HONOR OF INTRODUCING

OUR PANELISTS TODAY ON THE ISSUE OF OPIOIDS AND COMMUNITIES OF

COLOR. I'M GOING TO DO QUICK

INTRODUCTIONS OF THEM. YOU HAVE THEIR BIOS MORE

EXTENSIVE AND A VERY IMPRESSIVE BIOS IN YOUR PACKETS AND ONLINE.

THEN I'M GOING TO ASK THEM TO EACH COME UP.

FIRST WE START WITH DR. BENJAMIN COOK IN THE CENTER FOR

MULTICULTURAL MENTALITY HEALTH RESEARCH AND ASSISTANT PROFESSOR

AT HARVARD MEDICAL SCHOOL. HIS RESEARCH INTERESTS ARE

IMPROVING METHODS FOR MEASURING DISPARITIES AND APPLYING THESE

METHODS TO UNDERSTAND MECHANISMS UNDERLYING MENTAL HEALTH AND

SUBSTANCE USE DISPARITIES. HIS COMMENTS ARE ENTITLED

OPIOIDS RESEARCH IN MINORITY COMMUNITIES.

BEN, DO YOU WANT TO COME UP? MISS LEAH COOK IS A LONG TIME

RESIDENT OF BALTIMORE CITY. SHE GRADUATED FROM LOYOLA

UNIVERSITY IN 2017 WITH HER BACHELOR'S IN BIOLOGY, CURRENTLY

A BALTIMORE CORE FELLOW WHO STRIVES TO MAKE EQUITY AN

ESSENTIAL PART OF GOVERNMENT AGENCIES.

HER EXPERTISE LIES WITHIN HER PERSONAL STORY OF ADDICTION AND

TRAUMA. SHE USES STORYTELLING AS A WAY

TO INCITE EMOTION AND CHANGE. HER COMMENTS ARE ENTITLED "MY

FAMILY STORY OF ADDICTION." DR. SHELLY CHOO IS SENIOR

MEDICAL ADVISOR IN THE BALTIMORE CITY HEALTH DEPARTMENT.

SHE LEADS CONVENINGS WITH CITY PHYSICIANS AROUND BEHAVIORAL AND

POPULATION HEALTH INITIATIVES. SHE PREVIOUSLY SERVED AS A

SENIOR MEDICAL ADVISER AND THE BUREAU OF MATERNAL AND CHILD

HEALTH. SHE IS BOARD CERTIFIED IN

GENERAL PREVENTIVE MEDICINE AND PUBLIC HEALTH AND SHE WILL

COMMENT ON OPIOID INITIATIVES IN BALTIMORE CITY.

FINALLY, DR. KAREN SMITH IS A CMS CLINICIAN CHAMPION AND

FAMILY PHYSICIAN PRACTICING IN THE RURAL COMMUNITY OF RAEFORD,

NORTH CAROLINA, PART OF THE HOPE COUNTY COMMUNITY FOR 26 YEARS,

PROVIDING ACUTE, CHRONIC AND PREVENTIVE CARE.

MOST RECENTLY SHE HAS BEEN PROVIDING SERVICES IN THE

TREATMENT OF SUBSTANCE USE DISORDERS, PARTICIPATING IN

HEALTHCARE REFORM INITIATIVES, AND ON-SITE EDUCATION EXPERIENCE

FOR LEARNERS IN HEALTHCARE. SHE WILL PROVIDE OBSERVATIONS

FROM THE CLINIC. SO I'M GOING TO TURN IT OVER TO

OUR PANELISTS, WE'RE GOING TO START WITH BEN AND I'M GOING TO

KEEP TIME. >> IT'S WONDERFUL TO BE HERE.

THANK YOU TO DR. JAMES AND DR. WONG FOR THE INVITATION AND

FOR SETTING UP THIS EVENT. SUCH AN IMPORTANT EVENT, YOU'VE

DONE SO MUCH WORK IN RAISING AWARENESS ON THESE ISSUES AROUND

THE OPIOID CRISIS AND AROUND RACIAL AND ETHNIC DISPARITIES IN

GENERAL, BUT PARTICULARLY THIS FOCUS ON RACIAL AND ETHNIC

MINORITIES, AND OPIOID USE DISORDER IS SUCH AN IMPORTANT

ONE. I'M GOING TO DIG INTO THE DATA

BY TALKING ABOUT ALL THE DATA WE'VE BEEN COLLECTING ON THIS

EPIDEMIC AND HOW IT MIGHT BE EVOLVING.

I'M GOING TO TRY TO DO THREE THINGS, FIRST I'D LIKE TO LOOK

AT TRENDS IN MORTALITY, OPIOID MISUSE, I WANT TO DISTINGUISH

BETWEEN THOSE TWO THINGS AND DO THAT BY RACE/ETHNICITY.

I WANT TO TAKE THIS OPPORTUNITY TO APOLOGIZE THAT WE DON'T HAVE

A LOT OF DATA ON CERTAIN RACIAL GROUPS SUCH AS AMERICAN INDIAN,

NATIVE AMERICANS, WE DON'T HAVE GREAT DATA ABOUT SUBRACIAL

GROUPS, SUBETHNIC GROUPS SO I WANT TO TAKE THIS TIME TO

APOLOGIZE THAT A LOT OF WHAT YOU'LL SEE WILL BE COMPARISONS

BETWEEN NON-HISPANIC WHITES, HISPANICS OR LATINOS AND

AFRICAN-AMERICANS. THE SECOND THING I WANT DO IS

FOCUS ON ACCESS TO MEDICATION-ASSISTED OPIOID USE

DISORDER TREATMENT, WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT TREATMENT, WHAT DO WE

KNOW ABOUT ACCESS TO THAT TREATMENT.

THE THIRD THING WE'LL GO OVER IS ONCE YOU DO ACCESS TREATMENT,

WHAT DO THE OUTCOMES LOOK LIKE, WHAT DOES QUALITY LOOK LIKE BY

RACE/ETHNICITY? SO I WANT TO BREAK IT INTO 1998

TO 2014 AND 2015 TO 2016. I THINK WE'RE STARTING TO SEE

THE EVOLUTION OF THE EPIDEMIC IN THESE LAST COUPLE YEARS.

THIS IS WHAT THAT EARLY PERIOD LOOKS LIKE IN SOME SENSE, IS

CAPTURED BY THIS "NEW YORK TIMES" ARTICLE THAT SAYS DRUG

OVERDOSES PROPEL RISE IN MORTALITY RATES OF YOUNG WHITES,

AND THEN THIS KIND OF SEMINAL ARTICLE THAT CAME OUT SHOWING

RISING MORBIDITY AND MORTALITY IN MID LIFE AMONG WHITE

NON-HISPANIC AMERICANS IN THE 21ST CENTURY.

REALLY IT'S THIS FIGURE THAT GOT A LOT OF ATTENTION AND THIS IS A

REAL STRIKING FIGURE. YOU CAN SEE THAT FOR EVERYONE,

MORTALITY IS GETTING BETTER. THE DEATHS PER 100,000 IS

GETTING BETTER OVER TIME. AND THAT'S IN FRANCE, GERMANY,

BUT LOOK AT THAT INFLECTION POINT FOR U.S. WHITES BETWEEN 45

AND 54 YEARS OLD. THAT'S SOMETHING WE JUST HAVEN'T

SEEN, THAT MORTALITY RATES HAVE THAT INFLECTION POINT AROUND

1990. IN THE LATE 1990S.

SO WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT THAT? WE KNOW THERE'S SOMETHING IN

THAT CASE THAT THERE'S AN INFLECTION POINT IN 1998, A LOT

OF IT IS DUE TO DRUG USE, OVERDOSE, SUICIDE, CIRRHOSIS.

ALCOHOL AND OPIOID USE PLAYED A BIG PART IN WHAT'S GOING ON WITH

THAT INFLECTION POINT. THERE ARE A NUMBER OF STUDIES

THAT SHOW THIS BETWEEN PAIN, MEDICATION PRESCRIPTION IN THE

90S WITH THESE STARK CHANGES FOR THAT WHITE POPULATION.

WE ALSO KNOW THAT AROUND THIS TIME A LOT OF POLICIES CAME INTO

EFFECT THAT TRIED TO LIMIT THE AMOUNT OF PAIN MEDICATIONS THAT

WERE IN CIRCULATION. SO BETTER PRESCRIPTION

MANAGEMENT, BETTER PHARMACY MANAGEMENT, BETTER MONITORING OF

PRIMARY CARE AND PRESCRIBERS, AND THAT LED TO A SUBSTITUTION

OF HEROIN FOR THIS GROUP OF FOLKS THAT WERE ADDICTED TO PAIN

MEDICATIONS. ADD TO THAT SO MANY WHITES

INITIATING HEROIN USE BEFORE THAT BUT THEN YOU ADD TO THAT

THE FALLING PRICE OF HEROIN DURING THIS TIME PERIOD AND THE

RISING POTENCY OF HEROIN IN THIS TIME PERIOD.

ADDING FENTANYL TO THE HEROIN THAT'S AVAILABLE, YOU START TO

SEE AVAILABILITY TO HEROIN IN NEW AREAS.

SO THAT'S KIND OF WHAT'S TRENDING TOWARDS THE LATTER PART

OF THIS PERIOD. SO NOW WE MOVE TO 2015 AND 2016,

YOU'VE SEEN THIS PAIN MEDICATION, A LOT OF OVERDOSE,

REALLY SKYROCKETING RATES, NOW START TO ENTER RACIAL AND ETHNIC

MINORITY COMMUNITIES IN 2015 AND 2016.

AND THIS IS SORT OF THE NEW CHANGE IN TREND THAT I WANTED TO

BRING NOTICE TO SO IN A NUMBER STATES RACIAL AND ETHNIC

MINORITIES HAVE HIGHER OVERDOSE RATES THAN WHITES IN MANY STATES

THIS IS COMING FROM THE CDC COMPILED BY KAISER FAMILY

FOUNDATION. YOU CAN SEE IN SOME STATES LIKE

IN MISSOURI, THE BLACK RATE HAS ACTUALLY SURPASSED THE WHITE

RATE IN TERMS OF OPIOID OVERDOSE DEATHS.

AND YOU CAN SEE THAT HAPPEN IN ABOUT 2013, AND THAT KIND OF

STARK SLOPE IS SOMETHING THAT WE'LL SEE A LOT IN THESE FIGURES

BETWEEN 2015 AND 2016. YOU START TO SEE THAT LINE

ALMOST GO VERTICALLY. NOW WE'RE TALKING ABOUT 28 PER

100,000 PEOPLE IN MISSOURI ARE HAVING OPIOID OVERDOSE DEATHS IN

THE BLACK POPULATION. IN MASSACHUSETTS WHERE I'M FROM,

WE'RE SEEING HISPANIC RATES NEARING WHITE RATES.

YOU CAN SEE AGAIN WE HAVE THOSE KIND OF STARK INCLINES OVER

THERE, AND THAT MIDDLE LINE IS THE HISPANICS CATCHING UP TO

WHITES IN MASSACHUSETTS. SO YOU SEE THIS DISTURBING TREND

OF OPIOID OVERDOSE DEATHS REALLY INCREASING IN 2015 AND 2016 AND

YOU SEE HISPANICS CATCHING UP TO WHITES.

HERE'S THAT DISTURBING TREND AGAIN, THE SLOPE SHIFT IN THE

LATER YEARS OF THESE FIGURES ALSO.

IN OHIO, THE WHITE RATE CONTINUES TO CLIMB, YOU'RE

STARTING TO SEE THE BLACK RATE HAVE THAT SAME SLOPE IN 2015 AND

2016. THEN I WANT TO MENTION IN THE

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA WHERE WE ARE NOW THAT THE BLACK RATE IS

THE HIGHEST IN THE COUNTRY OF ANY RACIAL AND ETHNIC GROUP, SO

AT 50 PER 100,000 PEOPLE IN THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA FOR THE

BLACK POPULATION. THERE HASN'T BEEN A LOT OF DATA

COLLECTED FOR WHITE, HISPANIC, NATIVE AMERICAN AND ASIAN, BUT

THAT RATE OF 50 PER 100,000 IS AS BAD AS ANY OTHER PLACE IN THE

ENTIRE COUNTRY FOR ANY RACIAL AND ETHNIC GROUP.

ALSO THE FACTOR OF THE SHIFT THAT A LOT OF THESE DEATHS PER

100,000 HAVE BEEN MOVING INTO URBAN AREAS.

SO IN 2015 AND A 2016, YOU STILL SEE THAT SAME TREND SHIFT

UPWARDS FOR URBAN AREAS AND KIND OF THE SCISSORS EFFECT BETWEEN

URBAN AND RURAL AREAS FOR WHITES AND BLACKS.

IF WE STEP BACK AND LOOK AT MISUSE, WE SEE FROM THE NATIONAL

SURVEY ON DRUG USE AND HEALTH ABOUT 4.7% OF WHITES IN A

NATIONAL SAMPLE MISUSING OPIOIDS.

4% OF BLACKS, 4.4% OF HISPANICS AND ASIANS, ABOUT 2%.

SO THIS IS WHERE WE'RE SEEING A LOT OF MISUSE.

IF YOU PUT THAT INTO MILLIONS OF PEOPLE, YOU'RE TALKING ABOUT

8 MILLION WHITES IN THE U.S., STILL 300,000 ASIANS THAT ARE

STRUGGLING WITH OPIOID USE AND MISUSE.

WE'RE STARTING TO SEE A CHANGE IN INFLECTION POINT IN THIS

EPIDEMIC OF OPIOID USE. BLACKS -- SOME OF THE

EXPLANATIONS THAT PEOPLE HAVE PUT OUT THERE IS THAT BLACKS,

HISPANICS AND ASIANS RECEIVED PAIN MEDICATIONS IN THE LATE

1990S AT LOWER RATES COMPARED TO WHITES.

PRESCRIBES LESS FOR ARE AFRICAN-AMERICANS AND LESS FOR

HISPANICS BECAUSE THEY HAD DIFFERENT ASSESSMENTS OF THEIR

PAIN LEVELS AND TREATMENT. THERE'S BEEN SOME ARTICLES ABOUT

THAT, ALSO A CONCERN THAT'S BEEN FOUND IN SOME OF THE RESEARCH

THAT SHOWS THAT CLINICIANS ARE MORE LIKELY TO BE CONCERNED THAT

MINORITIES MIGHT MISUSE OR RESELL THE PRESCRIPTIONS SO YOU

HAVE ALMOST THIS PROTECTIVE EFFECT IN THE LATE '90S THAT

THERE JUST WASN'T AS MUCH PAIN MEDICATION PRESCRIPTION

HAPPENING IN MINORITY COMMUNITIES.

BUT NOW YOU SEE THIS OVERDOSE RISK MOVING FROM PAIN MEDICATION

MISUSE THAT'S MUCH MORE TIGHTLY REGULATED INTO HEROIN.

NOW WE'RE TALKING ABOUT HEROIN LACED WITH FENTANYL AND

CARFENTANYL AND THAT MOVE TOWARDS URBAN HEROIN USERS IS

CHANGING WHAT WE'RE SEEING ABOUT OVERDOSE RATES IN THE U.S. AND

THE DEMOGRAPHICS OF THOSE OVERDOSES.

SO THAT'S A QUICK SUMMARY OF MORTALITY OVERDOSE AND MISUSE BY

RACIAL AND ETHNIC GROUP, AND NOW I'D LIKE TO TALK A LITTLE BIT

ABOUT WHAT THE STATISTICS LOOK LIKE FOR OPIOID USE DISORDER

TREATMENT IN THE U.S. AND I'M REALLY FOCUSED ON ACCESS HERE.

SO THESE NUMBERS TO ME ARE THE MOST STARK OF ALL OF THE NUMBERS

THAT I HAVE, AND HAVE BEEN FOR A WHILE, SO THIS IS AMONG THOSE

WITH OPIOID MISUSE, HOW MANY GET ANY SUBSTANCE USE TREATMENT AT

ALL. AND IT'S 5%, RIGHT?

SO OF THOSE WHO HAVE MISUSED OPIOIDS IN THE LAST YEAR, 4.5%

OF WHITES, 4.7% OF BLACKS AND 1.7% OF HISPANICS RECEIVED ANY

TREATMENT AT ALL FOR PAIN MEDICATION AND ABUSE OF PAIN

RELIEVERS. LET'S BROADEN THAT AND SAY DID

THEY GET ANY ILLICIT DRUG TREATMENT AT ALL?

NOW WE'RE IN THE 7% RANGE, 4.5% FOR LATINOS.

THIS IS A PATTERN OF SUBSTANCE USE TREATMENT IN THE U.S.

OF THOSE PEOPLE WITH SUBSTANCE USE DISORDERS, REALLY ABOUT 10%

HAD EVER RECEIVED TREATMENT. WHAT WE'RE SEEING HERE FOR

SUBSTANCE USE, FOR PAIN RELIEVERS AND FOR HEROIN, IS

THAT THOSE NUMBERS ARE EVEN LOWER WHEN YOU HAVE LATINO

COMMUNITIES HAVING EVEN LOWER RATES STILL.

WE KNOW THAT -- AND THE SURGEON GENERAL BROUGHT THIS UP TOO,

THAT THERE'S THIS CONNECTION BETWEEN SUBSTANCE ABUSE AND THE

CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM. UNFORTUNATELY THOSE WHO HAVE HAD

ANY SUBSTANCE USE TREATMENT ARE VERY LIKELY TO HAVE INTERACTED

WITH THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM.

SO OF THOSE THAT HAD ANY SUBSTANCE USE TREATMENT AT ALL

IN THE LAST YEAR IN THIS TIME PERIOD BETWEEN 2013 AND 2016, 60

TO 70% OF THEM HAD INTERACTIONS WITH THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE

SYSTEM. EITHER THEY WERE ARRESTED OR

BOOKED, AND THEN YOU GET DOWN TO 20 OR 30% THAT WERE ON PROBATION

IN THE LAST YEAR AND THEN 5 TO 10% THAT WERE ON PAROLE OR

RELEASED IN THE LAST YEAR. I PUT THIS SLIDE UP THERE TO

SHOW YOU HOW INTERCONNECTED THE SUBSTANCE USE TREATMENT SYSTEM

IS IN THIS COUNTRY WITH THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM.

IN SOME WAYS, YOU WILL HAVE TO MAKE IT TO ROCK BOTTOM IN ORDER

TO GET TREATMENT. THAT SEEMS BACKWARDS THAT WE

RELY ON THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM TO MANDATE BECAUSE OF

PROBATION, MANDATE THAT YOU GO TO SUBSTANCE USE TREATMENT.

IT TO HAVE PA A ROLE OR YOUR RELEASE BE CONDITIONAL ON

SUBSTANCE USE TREATMENT. THE TREATMENT SHOULD HAPPEN LONG

BEFORE THAT. AND THEN I WANT TO BRING UP THIS

ISSUE OF RACIAL AND ETHNIC DISPARITIES IN MENTAL CARE

ACCESS, BECAUSE OF THE CO-MORBIDITY BETWEEN SUBSTANCE

USE DISORDER AND MENTAL HEALTH ISSUES.

SO THIS IS ONE OF MANY STUDIES THAT HAVE BEEN DONE THAT SHOW

THAT WHITES ARE TWICE AS LIKELY TO ACCESS MENTAL HEALTHCARE THAN

RACIAL AND ETHNIC MINORITIES. WE'VE DONE THIS A LOT OF

DIFFERENT WAYS. WE'VE LOOKED WITHIN DEPRESSED

POPULATIONS WITH ANXIETY DISORDER, WE'VE ADJUSTED FOR

MENTAL HEALTH DISORDER, WE'VE LOOKED AT FOLKS WITHIN

PSYCHOLOGICAL DISTRESS AND YOU SEE THIS PERSISTENT 2 TO

1 DISPARITY IN MENTAL HEALTHCARE ACCESS.

SO YOU ADD THAT TO THE SUBSTANCE USE TREATMENT RATES THAT WE JUST

SAW THAT WERE SO LOW, AND YOU CAN SEE HOW THERE'S A REAL

BUDDING PROBLEM WITH TREATMENT OF RACIAL AND ETHNIC MINORITIES

WITH SUBSTANCE USE DISORDER. SO THAT'S THE SECOND TAKEAWAY

THAT I WANT YOU TO HAVE, IS THAT THERE'S JUST INADEQUATE

TREATMENT ACCESS IN THE U.S. THERE'S A LOT OF BARRIERS TO

TREATMENT IN THE U.S., NOW THINK ABOUT EVIDENCE BASED MEDICATION

ASSISTED TREATMENT SUCH AS NALTREXONE, THINKING ABOUT

BUPRENORPHINE AS AN ADDITION TO COGNITIVE BEHAVIORAL THERAPY AND

OTHER TYPES OF THERAPY. THE SUPPLY OF FOLKS THAT ARE

LICENSED TO GIVE OUT BUPRENORPHINE AND SOME OF THESE

OTHER MEDICATIONS IS REALLY LIMITED, AND THAT'S ESPECIALLY

TRUE IN SOME STATES AND NON-URBAN AREAS.

THERE'S COST BARRIERS EVEN FOR THOSE WHO ARE INSURED, IT'S JUST

FAR TOO DIFFICULT IN THESE EARLY STAGES OF ADDICTION TO GET ANY

TREATMENT OF AT ALL. MOTIVATIONAL INTERVIEWING,

MINDFULNESS INTERVENTION, OTHER NON-MEDICATION TREATMENT ALSO,

VERY DIFFICULT TO ACCESS BECAUSE OF STIGMA AND ALSO STRUCTURAL

FACTORS THAT JUST MAKE IT DIFFICULT TO ACCESS MENTAL

HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE USE TREATMENT.

THEN WE HAVE THIS ISSUE THAT A MAJORITY RECEIVING SUBSTANCE USE

TREATMENT ARE GETTING MANDATED TREATMENT, THEY'RE GETTING THEIR

SERVICES IN MANDATED TREATMENT PROGRAMS FOR PAROLE OR PROBATION

REQUIREMENT. LET ME MOVE QUICKLY TO WHAT

HAPPENS FOR THOSE FEW THAT MAKE IT INTO SUBSTANCE USE TREATMENT

FACILITIES. SO NOW THERE'S SOME GOOD NEWS

HERE THAT IF WE'RE THINKING ABOUT OPIOID AGONIST TREATMENTS,

SOME OF THESE MEDICATIONS THAT HAVE BEEN SHOWN TO WORK VERY

WELL FOR RECOVERY WHEN THEY'RE PAIRED WITH OTHER TYPES OF

TREATMENT, WE SEE THAT AFRICAN-AMERICANS AND HISPANICS

ARE CLOSER TO 50% OR 40% OF THOSE IN TREATMENT FACILITIES

ARE GETTING THESE OPIOID AGONIST TREATMENTS.

WHITES, ONLY -- A LOT OF WORK TO

BE DONE FOR EVERYTHING, BUT HERE YOU SEE THAT AFRICAN-AMERICANS

AND HISPANICS ARE MORE LIKELY TO BE MEDICATED.

NOW IF WE LOOK AT TREATMENT COMPLETION, WHO MAKES IT OUT OF

THESE PROGRAMS, COMPLETING THEIR TREATMENT PLAN, YOU SEE BLACKS,

HISPANICS, NATIVE AMERICANS WHO HAVE HEROIN USE DISORDER ARE

MUCH LESS LIKELY TO COMPLETE THEIR TREATMENT.

LESS THAN 50% OF FOLKS WHO ARE MAKING IT INTO THESE TREATMENT

CENTERS ARE COMPLETING THEIR TREATMENT, ARE FULFILLING THEIR

TREATMENT PLAN. SO THAT'S A COUPLE OF SLIDES TO

GET YOU TO THIS THIRD TAKEAWAY, THAT THERE'S LOW QUALITY OF

SPECIALTY SUBSTANCE USE TREATMENT.

IF YOU MAKE IT OVER ALL OF THOSE HURDLES TO GET INTO TREATMENT,

NOW HALF OF THEM AREN'T GOING TO COMPLETE TREATMENT.

LESS THAN HALF OF THEM ARE GOING TO GET ANY MEDICATION ASSISTANCE

WITH THEIR TREATMENT. THAT'S STILL ABOUT 2 MILLION

PEOPLE IN THE U.S. RACIAL AND ETHNIC MINORITIES ARE 40% OF THE

ADMISSIONS IN THESE PUBLICLY FUNDED TREATMENT CENTERS SO THAT

LOW QUALITY IS BEING TRANSFERRED ON TO RACIAL AND ETHNIC

MINORITIES IN THE U.S. SO THOSE ARE THE THREE THINGS

THAT I WAS TRYING TO WALK YOU THROUGH.

ONE IS THAT THERE'S SOME -- QUITE A BIT OF EVIDENCE THAT THE

OPIOID EPIDEMIC IS SHIFTING, WITH INCREASING OVERDOSE RISKS

FOR BLACKS LAND TEE KNOWS AND THIS MOVEMENT INTO HEROIN AND

THE STOCKS AND SUPPLIES THAT ARE IN URBAN AREAS.

THE SECOND THING THAT I WANT TO YOU TAKE HOME IS THERE ARE THESE

EXTREMELY LOW RATES OF ACCESS TO SUBSTANCE USE TREATMENT IN THE

U.S. LESS THAN 5%.

YOU NEVER SEE SOMETHING LIKE THIS FOR CARDIOVASCULAR CARE,

YOU'D NEVER SEE SOMETHING LIKE THIS FOR DIB.

LESS THAN 10% FOR SUBSTANCE USE, AND EVEN LOWER FOR LATINOS.

THE THIRD THING I WANT YOU TO TAKE HOME IS THAT MEDICATION

ASSISTED TREATMENT WHICH HAS BEEN PROVEN TO BE SUCCESSFUL IS

STILL NOT THE NORM EVEN ONCE THEY MAKE IT INTO SUBSTANCE USE

TREATMENT FACILITIES AND TREATMENT COMPLETION RATES ARE

VERY LOW FOR RACIAL AND ETHNIC MINORITIES.

THINKING ABOUT WHERE REFORM CAN HAPPEN THIS, IS GOING TO TAKE A

PUBLIC HEALTH APPROACH, IT'S GOING TO TAKE EFFORTS FROM OMH

AND SAMHSA AND THE SURGEON GENERAL.

IN MULTIPLE PARTS OF THE CONTINUUM, THINKING ABOUT

PREVENTION, TREATMENT, HOW WE MAINTAIN TREATMENT, IT'S GOING

TO REQUIRE A PUBLIC HEALTH APPROACH.

INSURANCE REFORM ISN'T GO TO DO AS MUCH AS WE HOPE.

THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT, WE'VE DONE A COUPLE OF STUDIES THAT

HAVE SHOWN THAT THE DEPENDENT COVERAGE PROVISION HAS INCREASED

MENTAL HEALTHCARE USE IN THE U.S. BUT NOT INCREASE SUBSTANCE

USE TREATMENT. THE EXCHANGES IN MEDICAID

EXPANSION INCREASED MENTAL HEALTHCARE WHICH IS A GOOD THING

BUT IT DIDN'T REDUCE RACIAL AND ETHNIC DISPARITIES IN MENTAL

HEALTHCARE AND DIDN'T INCREASE ACCESS TO SUBSTANCE USE

TREATMENT. SO INSURANCE IS A GOOD FIRST

STEP BUT YOU NEED STEPS AFTER COVERAGE IN ORDER TO RECEIVE

QUALITY CARE. LET ME END WITH INDIVIDUALS IN

THE THROES OF SUBSTANCE DEPENDENCE ARE UNLIKELY TO

VOLUNTARILY ENTER TREATMENT. THIS IS A HARD THING TO GET

FOLKS WHO ARE ADDICTED INTO TREATMENT.

WE HAVE TO DO MORE THAN JUST INCREMENTAL CHANGES IN ORDER TO

MAKE THIS HAPPEN. THERE ARE SOME OTHER NICE MODELS

IN SPAIN, FOR EXAMPLE, COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTERS ARE OPEN LONG

HOURS AND ON WEEKENDS, THEY HAVE CLINICIANS READY TO DO THE

INTAKE AND PROVIDE MEDICATIONS EARLY ON AND THEY'RE MORE

AVAILABLE. HERE YOU HAVE TO GO TO A PRIMARY

CARE PROVIDER, GET A REFERRAL, AND THEN WAIT FOR THAT SPECIALTY

PROVIDER WHO MAY NOT EXIST TO PROVIDE TREATMENT FOR YOU.

THAT WINDOW, THAT NARROW WINDOW IN SOMEBODY WHO'S ADDICTED TO

SUBSTANCE USE IS GOING TO CLOSE IF YOU HAVE TO WAIT FOR THE

FOLLOW-UP VISIT. LASTLY THESE COMMUNITY-BASED

HOLISTIC APPROACHES THAT ADDRESS SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH

HOLD A LOT OF PROMISE. THERE'S QUITE A BIT OF WORK IN

DIFFERENT PARTS OF THE COUNTRY ON DIVERTING FOLKS WITH MENTAL

HEALTH PROBLEMS INSTEAD OF SENDING THEM TO PRISON OR JAIL,

WORKING WITH THEIR MENTAL HEALTH PROBLEMS AND THEIR ADDICTION

ISSUES. THEN COMMUNITY CARE TEAMS,

REALLY A FULL COURT PRESS IS NEEDED HERE, PSYCHOLOGISTS,

PSYCHIATRISTS, SOCIAL WORKERS, COMMUNITY HEALTH WORKERS NEED TO

WORK TOGETHER IN ORDER TO ADDRESS THE EVOLVING EPIDEMIC.

THANK YOU VERY MUCH FOR YOUR TIME AND THE OPPORTUNITY TO BE

HERE. THANK YOU.

[APPLAUSE] >> HI, EVERYONE.

MY NAME IS LEAH HILL. I'M HERE TODAY BECAUSE ADDICTION

HAS AFFECTED MY FAMILY. WHEN I WAS YOUNGER, MY FATHER,

HE DIED A COUPLE WEEKS BEFORE MY BIRTHDAY.

SO I DIDN'T GET TO KNOW HIM. AS YOU CAN SEE IT'S THE OLDER

GENTLEMAN IN THE BACK. MY BROTHER, AND ME IN THE FRONT.

I DIDN'T GET TO KNOW HIS LAUGHTER, I DIDN'T GET TO KNOW

HIS SMELL, BUT ONE THING MY FAMILY DID WAS TO MAKE SURE THAT

I KNEW THAT MY FATHER LOVED ME AND THAT HE HAD UNCONDITIONAL

LOVE. THEY SAY HE TOOK ME EVERYWHERE,

THAT HE CARRIED ME LIKE A SACK OF POTATOES UNDER HIS ARM.

I DON'T THINK THAT'S THE WAY YOU'RE SUPPOSED TO CARRY A

CHILD, BUT HE LOVED ME VERY MUCH.

18 YEARS AFTER HIS DEATH, MY BROTHER AND A I SAT DOWN, I'M

NOT SURE WHAT WE WERE TALKING ABOUT BUT WE WERE LOOKING

THROUGH THE PHOTO ALBUM AND HE SAID LEAH, I WANT YOU TO HAVE

THIS PICTURE. OKAY, PAUL, WELL, THANK YOU.

HE TOLD ME, I WANT YOU TO LISTEN, LEAH, AND I DON'T WANT

YOU TO BE UPSET. FOR 18 YEARS, MY FAMILY HAS TOLD

ME OR HAD TOLD ME THAT MY FATHER DIED OF A HEART ATTACK.

AND THAT DAY, MY BROTHER DECIDED THAT HE WOULD BE THE ONE TO TELL

ME THAT HE DIED OF AN OVERDOSE. AND ADDICTION HAS BEEN IN MY

FAMILY SINCE MY MOTHER, SHE WAS ALSO ADDICTED TO HEROIN AS WELL.

I KNEW THAT ABOUT MY MOTHER. FOR ME, THE WHY OF HIM DYING OF

AN OVERDOSE, IT WAS A SHOCK BECAUSE THIS WAS THE PARENTS I

BELIEVED THAT LOVED ME, THAT DIDN'T CHOOSE DRUGS OVER ME AND

TO KNOW THAT IT WAS TAKEN AWAY, I WAS SO ANGRY FOR SO LONG.

THAT I WASN'T ENOUGH FOR THEIR LOVE, AND IT WAS HEARTBREAKING.

MY BROTHERS AND I WERE IN AND OUT OF HOMES THROUGHOUT OUR

CHILDHOOD. MY MOTHER WAS IN TREATMENT

CENTERS, IN AND OUT. IT'S NOT UNTIL YEARS LATER WHERE

I FINALLY UNDERSTOOD THAT ADDICTION IS A DISEASE.

WHEN I START WORKING IN MENTAL HEALTH, I FOUND FORGIVENESS.

I FOUND UNDERSTANDING. AND THAT'S WHEN I WAS ABLE TO

GROW. MY MOTHER, THIS IS MY HIGH

SCHOOL GRADUATION IN 2013. MY MOTHER TOLD ME THAT YES, SHE

WAS SELFISH AND SHE MADE A CHOICE BUT TO STOP WAS A VERY

HARD CHOICE AND I CAN SAY TODAY THAT SHE IS MY HERO BECAUSE SHE

FOUGHT THROUGH TREATMENT. SHE -- WHEN SHE FAILED, SHE GOT

BACK UP, AND SHE DID AGAIN AND AGAIN.

EVEN THOUGH THOSE WERE YEARS SHE WAS NOT IN MY LIFE, THOSE WERE

YEARS SHE WAS TRYING TO GET BETTER.

THERE WASN'T A LOT OF TREATMENT CENTERS IN BALTIMORE SO I

COULDN'T SEE HER BECAUSE SHE WAS IN OTHER STATES TRYING TO SEEK

HELP BECAUSE SHE WANTED TO BE THERE FOR MY SIBLINGS AND I.

AND IT WASN'T EASY, I CAN TELL YOU, MY BROTHERS AND I, WE

JUST -- ABOUT THE CHILDHOOD THAT WE HAD BECAUSE WE DIDN'T HAVE A

MOTHER OR A FATHER BECAUSE ADDICTION HAD TAKEN THEM AWAY.

BUT WE UNDERSTAND THAT WE MADE IT.

I GRADUATED FROM LOYOLA UNIVERSITY THIS YEAR, I JUST

TOOK MY M CATS. [APPLAUSE]

AND IT'S THROUGH MY MOTHER'S SACRIFICE THAT SHE WAS ABLE TO

GET TREATMENT, EVEN THOUGH IT WASN'T ACCESSIBLE, SHE FOUGHT

HARD TO GET IT. UNLIKE OTHER PEOPLE IN BALTIMORE

CITY, THE ACCESS TO TREATMENT IS VERY HARD, THE CONDITION THAT

SOME CHILDREN HAVE TO LIVE IN AT BALTIMORE CITY IS HARD, CHILDREN

HAVE THE WEIGHT OF LIVING IN AN ENVIRONMENT THAT THEY'RE

SURROUNDED WITH VIE VENT, VERY TRAUMATIC EVENTS THAT OCCUR.

IT'S HARD GROWING UP IN THE CITY, NOT HAVING THAT SUPPORT

SYSTEM. MY BROTHERS AND I WERE VERY

LUCKY; OTHER CHILDREN WHO GREW UP IN THIS ENVIRONMENT AREN'T AS

LUCKY. I RECENTLY READ THAT, MY

BROTHER, HE WAS A DRUG DEALER. IN THE DAY, MY MOTHER -- MY

MOTHER DID NOT PROVIDE FOR US, AND SO MY BROTHER HAD TO BE THE

PROVIDER. HE HAD TO MAKE REALLY BAD

CHOICES TO BE A PARENT TO US AND I CANNOT SAY THAT HE WAS EVER A

BAD PERSON OR SOMETHING WAS MORALLY WRONG WITH HIM.

IT WAS THE SITUATION THAT WE WERE PUT THE IN, AND IT'S ALSO

THE SITUATION THAT OTHER CHILDREN IN BALTIMORE HAVE TO GO

THROUGH. THAT IN THE SYSTEM WE ARE

CHILDREN, THEY FALL THROUGH THE CRACKS, BECAUSE ADDICTION, IT

DOESN'T JUST AFFECT THE PERSON , IT AFFECTS EVERYONE AROUND US.

SO MY BROTHER, OF COURSE HE HAD A CHOICE, BUT SOMETIMES YOU

DON'T, AND IF INADEQUATE RESOURCES IN OUR COMMUNITIES,

WHAT CHOICE CAN WE MAKE? I'M SO PROUD OF MY BROTHER

BECAUSE HE FINALLY IS GETTING HIS GED.

HE'S 35, AND I COULD NOT BE MORE PROUD OF HIM.

BECAUSE WE MADE CHOICES TO SURVIVE, AND OTHER PEOPLE ARE

MAKING THESE SAME CHOICES THAT LIVE IN THE CITY OF BALTIMORE.

IT'S EASIER TO BLAME THE INDIVIDUAL THAN IT IS TO BLAME

THE SYSTEM OF NOT PROVIDING FOR CHILDREN, OF NOT GIVING THEM

RESOURCES, OF PUTTING THEM IN A BIND THAT THEY HAVE TO MAKE THAT

DECISION AT A YOUNG AGE. I KNOW WHY I'M HERE.

I WANT TO ASK YOU WHY ARE YOU HERE, WHY DO YOU SHOW UP?

DRUGS HAVE BEEN IN THE BLACK COMMUNITIES FOR A VERY LONG TIME

NOW. AND WE HAVE TO ASK THE REASONS

WHY WE'RE HERE, WHY NOW, WHY IS IT SO IMPORTANT NOW.

BECAUSE IT WASN'T THE SAME WHEN MY FATHER, HE DIED OF AN

OVERDOSE. UNTIL WE UNDERSTAND THE REASON

WHY WE'RE HERE NOW, THEN A CERTAIN GROUP OF PEOPLE WILL BE

LESS BEHIND, THAT ADDICTION WILL BE -- CONTINUE TO BE

STIGMATIZED, THAT THEY WILL BE OF MORAL FAILING WHILE OTHERS

WILL GET TREATMENT AND WILL BE MORE ACCEPTED INTO SOCIETY.

[APPLAUSE] I WANT TO THANK YOU FOR

LISTENING TO ME, I'M SORRY I CRIED.

I REALLY TRIED NOT TO. BUT THE WOUNDS ARE -- THEY'RE

HEALING, AND IT'S NOT HARD TO TALK -- IT'S HARD TO TALK ABOUT

MY PARENTS BECAUSE OF FEAR OF JUDGMENT THAT PEOPLE MAY HAVE

TOWARD THEM OR THE CHOICES THEY HAD TO MAKE.

MY MOTHER TOLD ME THAT SHE WAS SELFISH AND THAT IN THE

BEGINNING, THAT SHE WANTED IT ALL, BUT IT WAS OVERWHELMING AND

THAT SHE WAS SORRY THAT SHE LET THIS TAKE OVER HER LIFE, THAT IT

WAS LIKE SHE WAS IN A PRISON IN HER OWN BODY, THAT SHE HAD GOOD

INTENTIONS AND THAT SHE LOVED ME AND MY BROTHER SO VERY MUCH, BUT

IT'S SOMETHING THAT TOOK A VERY LONG TIME TO OVERCOME, AND I'M

VERY PROUD OF HER, AND I'M VERY PROUD OF THE PEOPLE WHO HAVE

BEEN THROUGH TREATMENT AND THE PEOPLE WHO DO NOT GIVE UP, AND

I'M VERY PROUD OF THE PEOPLE WHO ARE STILL OUT IN THE STREETS OF

BALTIMORE CITY, STILL TRYING TO LIVE, AND SO THAT CHILDREN WHO

HAVE PARENTS THAT HAVE SUBSTANCE USE DISORDER, THAT IT IS A

STRUGGLE IN ITS OWN TO SEE YOUR PARENTS STRUGGLE, BUT I'M HERE

TO TELL YOU THAT IT IS A DISEASE AND TO FIND FORGIVENESS, BECAUSE

AT THE END OF THE DAY, YOU'RE HERE AND TO ALL, TRY TO MAKE A

DIFFERENCE. THANK YOU.

[APPLAUSE]

>> I JUST WANT TO SAY THANK YOU, LEAH, AND ALSO I'M REALLY,

REALLY LUCKY BECAUSE I GET TO WORK WITH HER EVERY DAY.

SHE'S ONE OF OUR BEHAVIORAL HEALTH FELLOWS AND SHE IS

AMAZING. AMAZING WITH A CAPITAL A.

AND ACTUALLY ALL CAPS. SO LEAH, THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR

SHARING YOUR STORY. [APPLAUSE]

WE'RE GOING TO JUMP BACK INTO SOME NUMBERS WITH BALTIMORE CITY

NOW. AND EVEN BEFORE WE JUMP BACK

INTO BALTIMORE CITY, WE'RE GOING TO TALK ABOUT MARYLAND AND

FRAMING WHAT'S HAPPENING IN THE CITY ON A GLOBAL LEVEL AND WHAT

THE CITY HEALTH DEPARTMENT IS DOING.

A LOT OF LEA H'S AMAZING WORK YOU'VE DONE AT WELL.

THIS IS THE NUMBER OF OVERDOSE DEATHS IN MARYLAND.

YOU CAN SEE FROM 2012 TO 2016 THAT THE NUMBERS HAVE INCREASED.

SO IN 2012, IT WAS 799, AND IN 2016, IT WAS 2,089.

NOW WE'RE GOING TO GO INTO BALTIMORE CITY AND YOU CAN SEE

THE SAME TRAJECTORY AS WELL. IN 2011, THERE WERE 167 OVERDOSE

DEATHS AND IN 2016, 694. THE OTHER POINT I WANT TO MAKE

IS THAT YOU'LL SEE THERE'S TWO DIFFERENT COLORS.

THE LIGHTER BLUE COLOR IS THE FENTANYL DEATH SO IN 2012, WE

HAD FOUR FENTANYL RELATED DEATHS IN BALTIMORE CITY, AND IN 2016,

IT WAS 419. THE OTHER THING I WANT TO MAKE A

POINT ABOUT IS THAT IN BALTIMORE CITY, WE HAVE ABOUT 620,000

RESIDENTS, AND THESE ARE FAMILY MEMBERS, THESE ARE AUNTS,

UNCLES, YOUR NEIGHBORS AS WELL, BUT THEN IN TERMS OF THESE

NUMBERS, WE ACCOUNT FOR 10% OF MARYLAND'S POPULATION BUT WE

ACCOUNT FOR A THIRD OF THE OVERDOSE DEATHS FOR MARYLAND.

BUT I ALSO WANT TO PAINT A DIFFERENT PICTURE AS WELL THAT

BEFORE 2011, IN 2009, OVERDOSE DEATHS WERE ACTUALLY GOING DOWN.

AND AS LEAH HAD MENTIONED, THIS IS AN EPIDEMIC THAT HAS BEEN IN

THE CITY FOR YEARS NOW. THE CITY ACTUALLY HAD BEEN

TRYING TO INCREASE TREATMENT, SO FOR THE RED LINE, YOU'LL SEE

THAT THE OVERDOSE DEATHS ARE COMING DOWN BUT YOU'LL ALSO SEE

THAT THE NUMBER OF BUPRENORPHINE PATIENTS ARE GOING UP.

WITH THE INCREASE OF TREATMENT, THE OVERDOSE DEATHS HAD GONE

DOWN, BUT THAT ALL CHANGED WHEN FENTANYL HAD COME TO BALTIMORE.

RIGHT NOW COMPARED TO OTHER METROPOLITAN COUNTIES, WHEN YOU

LOOK AT THE OVERDOSE FATALITY RATES, UNFORTUNATELY BALTIMORE

CITY IS LEADING OTHER METROPOLITAN COUNTIES.

THERE ARE RURAL COUNTIES THAT HAVE HIGHER OVERDOSE RATES BUT

THEN FOR METROPOLITAN COUNTIES, UNFORTUNATELY BALTIMORE CENTER,

WE ARE AT THE EPI CENTER OF THIS EPIDEMIC.

SO WHAT DO YOU DO WHEN YOU HAVE TWO RESIDENTS WHO ARE DYING

EVERY DAY, WHAT DO YOU DO WHEN YOU NEED TO STOP THESE NUMBERS

FROM OCCURRING, WHEN YOU NEED TO JUST SAVE YOUR FAMILY MEMBERS,

YOU NEED TO DO SOMETHING. SO FOR BALTIMORE CITY, THE

NUMBER ONE STRATEGY IS HOW DO WE PREVENT THESE OVERDOSE DEATHS

FROM OCCURRING, AND AS DR. ADAMS RELEASED YOUR ADVISORY, IT IS

PROVIDING NALOXONE. SO THERE IS FORTUNATELY AN

ANTIDOTE THAT CAN REVERSE AN OPIOID OVERDOSE AND IF IT'S

ADMINISTERED, THEN SOMEONE CAN BE WALKING AND TALKING WITHIN

MINUTES AS WELL. AND SO IN 2015, OUR HEALTH

COMMISSIONER ISSUED A STANDING ORDER THAT ALLOWS ANYONE TO

OBTAIN NALOXONE FROM A PHARMACY WITHOUT A PRESCRIPTION.

IN ADDITION, THE HEALTH DEPARTMENT HAS TRAINED OVER

35,000 RESIDENTS ON NALOXONE AND HOW TO USE NALOXONE, AND SO LEAH

IS ONE OF OUR NALOXONE TRAINERS, AND SHE'S BEEN GOING TO THE

LIBRARY, SCHOOL SOCIAL WORK, GOING EVERYWHERE TO TRAIN

EVERYONE ON NALOXONE AND YOU'VE BEEN DOING SUCH AMAZING WORK.

EVERYDAY RESIDENTS THEY HAVE SAVED OVER 1700 LIVES.

THAT'S THE NUMBER WE KNOW ABOUT AT THE HEALTH DEPARTMENT.

WE THINK THIS IS A HUGE UNDER ESTIMATION AS WELL.

I ALSO WANT TO SAY, WE DO HAVE A LIMITED SUPPLY OF NALOXONE.

WE CURRENTLY HAVE 3,400 UNITS THAT WE HAVE RIGHT NOW, AND THAT

SEEMS LIKE A LOT, BUT WE CAN DISTRIBUTE THAT REALLY, REALLY

EASILY WITHIN WEEKS. WE DO GET PHONE CALLS EVERY DAY

FROM COMMUNITY-BASED PROVIDERS, FROM HOSPITALS, FROM NON-PROFIT

ORGANIZATIONS, FROM DOCTORS' OFFICES AS WELL, ASKING IF WE

CAN PROVIDE THEM NALOXONE. SO WE UNFORTUNATELY HAVE TO TELL

THEM THAT WE HAVE A LIMITED SUPPLY THAT WE DO RESERVE IT FOR

A NEEDLE EXCHANGE -- BUT THE GOOD NEWS IS BECAUSE THERE'S A

STANDING ORDER AND IF THE PATIENT IS ON MEDICAID, THEY CAN

GET THE NALOXONE FOR $1 CO-PAY. SO ON ONE HAND, WE HAVE THESE

AMAZING PARTNER ORGANIZATIONS WHO SEE THE VALUE OF NALOXONE

AND SEE HOW GREAT AND LIFE SAVING THIS MEDICATION IS, BUT

ONCE IN A WHILE, WE WILL GET A QUESTION OF, WELL, IF WE GIVE

SOMEONE NALOXONE, DOESN'T IT MEAN THAT THAT PERSON WILL USE

AGAIN? SO WHAT WE SAY IS, WELL, IF WE

DON'T SAVE THEIR LIFE TODAY, HOW CAN WE EXPECT THEM TO GET INTO

TREATMENT TOMORROW? USUALLY THEY'LL COME BACK AND

REALIZE THE VALUE OF NALOXONE. BUT WE ALSO REALIZE THAT

NALOXONE IS NOT THE SILVER BULLET, IT IS ONE OF THE MANY

ANSWERS TO THIS COMPLEX EPIDEMIC, AND WE ALSO REALIZE

THAT TREATMENT IS IMPORTANT. SO THE SECOND PILLAR OF THE

BALTIMORE CITY HEALTH DEPARTMENT STRATEGY IS INCREASING ACCESS TO

ON DEMAND TREATMENT. AS LEAH HAD MENTIONED AND

DR. COOK HAD MENTIONED AND DR. ADAMS AS WELL THAT ADDICTION

IS A DISEASE, AND WE NEED TO TREAT IT AS SUCH AND IT'S NOT A

MORAL FAILING. TREATMENT WITH METHADONE,

BUPRENORPHINE WITH COUNSELING WORKS AND SHOWS TO DECREASE

MORTALITY BY 50%. HOWEVER, AS DR. COOK HAD

MENTIONED, ONLY A FEW RECEIVE TREATMENT.

IN THE CITY, WE USE A TELEPHONE LINE TO HELP PEOPLE GET LINKED

IN TO TREATMENT. WE HAVE A 24/7 BEHAVIORAL HEALTH

LINE, IN CASE YOU'RE EVER IN BALTIMORE CITY OR KNEW SOMEONE

WHO'S IN BALTIMORE CITY, SO THIS IS A NUMBER THAT ANY CITY

RESIDENT CAN CALL IN, OUR PROVIDERS CAN CALL IN SO THERE

CAN BE A WARM HANDOFF. THE STAFF MEMBERS OF THAT LINE

WILL ACTUALLY SET UP AN APPOINTMENT FOR THE PATIENT.

WE ALSO REALIZE AS DR. ADAMS HAS MENTIONED THAT WE NEED

PARTNERSHIPS, AND PARTNERSHIPS ARE SO EXTREMELY IMPORTANT.

WE'RE CURRENTLY WORKING WITH LAW ENFORCEMENT IN A PILOT PROGRAM

CALLED THE LAW ENFORCEMENT ASSISTED DIVERSION PROGRAM.

IT'S A PROGRAM BASED OFF A PROGRAM IN SEATTLE, WASHINGTON.

SO INSTEAD OF ARRESTING SOMEONE FOR USING DRUGS, WE PROVIDE THEM

WITH INTENSIVE CASE MANAGEMENT. THAT PROJECT MAKES A LOT OF

SENSE. JUST AS WE DON'T ARREST SOMEONE

WITH CANCER EXPECTING THEY'LL LEAVE JAIL OR PRISON THINKING

THEY'LL BE CANCER-FREE, WE SHOULDN'T DO THAT WITH ADDICTION

AS WELL. WE ALSO WORK WITH EMS AS WELL,

SO CURRENTLY EMS IN BALTIMORE CITY RELEASE APPROXIMATELY 5 TO

7,000 OVERDOSES A YEAR. SO ABOUT HALF OF THOSE

INDIVIDUALS WILL AGREE TO BE TAKEN TO THE HOSPITAL, ABOUT

HALF WON'T, SO WE'RE PARTNERING WITH EMS TO WORK WITH PEER

RECOVERY SPECIALISTS SO THEY CAN FOLLOW UP WITH INDIVIDUALS WHO

DON'T AGREE TO GO TO THE HOSPITAL.

RECENTLY IN BALTIMORE CITY, THE STABILIZATION CENTER HAS BEEN

OPENED SO THAT'S A 24/7 BEHAVIORAL HEALTH URGENT

CARE OF THE SORT WHERE IF SOMEONE IS INTOXICATED, THEY CAN

BE SENT TO THE STABILIZATION CENTER WHERE THEY CAN GET

SPECIALIZED TREATMENT FOR BEHAVIORAL HEALTH.

BUT WE ALSO REALIZED THAT WE NEED LOWER THRESHOLD

INTERVENTION POINTS, SO WE ARE WORKING WITH THE TRADITIONAL

HEALTHCARE SETTING, SO WE'RE WORKING WITH PRIMARY CARE

OFFICES, WE'RE ALSO WORKING WITH HOSPITALS.

IN BALTIMORE CITY, THEY'VE BEEN MAKING GREAT STRIDES.

MANY OF THE HOSPITALS NOW ARE DOING -- THEY'RE SCREENING

PROVIDING BRIEF INTERVENTIONS, REFERRAL TO TREATMENTS.

THEY ALSO HAVE PEER RECOVERY SPECIALISTS ON SITE.

SO THAT YOU HAVE THE WARM HANDOFF, SO THAT YOU CAN ALSO

ADDRESS ANY OF THE BARRIERS IN TERMS OF GETTING SOMEONE INTO

CARE, SO IF TRANSPORTATION IS AN ISSUE, THE PEER RECOVERY

SPECIALIST HELPS WITH THAT AS WELL.

THIS IS SOMETHING THAT'S NOT DONE JUST BY OURSELVES BUT IT'S

DONE WITH THE HOSPITALS, WITH THE STATE AND WITH THE LOCAL

IMPLEMENTATION GROUP ALSO CALLED MOSAIC AS WELL.

FINALLY I THINK WHAT LEAH HAD TOUCHED UPON AS WELL IS THE

STIGMA, THAT THERE IS STILL SO MUCH STIGMA, AND AS THE HEALTH

COMMISSIONER SAYS, IF SOMEONE HAS A PEANUT ALLERGY, AS A

DOCTOR YOU DON'T SAY TO THAT PERSON, I'M NOT GOING TO

PRESCRIBE YOU EPINEPHRINE BECAUSE IF I DO, YOU'RE GOING TO

EAT MORE PEANUTS. THAT IS RIDICULOUS.

UNFORTUNATELY WE HEAR THAT WITH ADDICTION.

WE HEAR THAT WITH NALOXONE AS WELL.

AND SO THE HEALTH DEPARTMENT HAS RELEASED A BOLD DONTDIE.ORG

CAMPAIGN WHERE IT TALKS ABOUT GETTING NALOXONE SAVING A LIFE

AND IT'S SOMETHING THAT EVERYONE CAN EASILY DO.

WE ALSO WORK WITH THE MAYOR'S OFFICE AND WITH OTHER COMMUNITY

ORGANIZATIONS AS WELL TO INCREASE ACCESS TO DRUG

TREATMENT. I THINK SO IN CLOSING,

UNFORTUNATELY FOR BALTIMORE CITY, WE HAVEN'T SEEN THE PEAK

OF THIS EPIDEMIC, AND WE REALLY NEED ALL HANDS ON DECK, AND WE

REALLY NEED TO RELY ON SCIENCE AND EVIDENCE THAT TREATMENT

EXISTS AND WORKS AND THIS IS NOT A MORAL FAILING.

I THINK NO ONE WHO CONTINUES DESPITE THEIR LIFE BEING

DESTROYED WOULD EVER CHOOSE THAT.

SO THIS IS A DISEASE AND WE REALLY MUST FULLY RECOGNIZE IT.

I THINK WE ALSO NEED TO CHANGE OUR POLICIES AND REMOVE

INSTITUTIONAL RACISM AS WELL. WE KNOW THAT THE WAR ON DRUGS,

THEY DON'T WORK. AND WE KNOW THAT THIS HAS

AFFECTED DISPROPORTIONATELY COMMUNITIES OF COLOR.

AND THE CONSEQUENCE OF WAR ON DRUGS HAVE BEEN LONG-STANDING.

SO WE NEED POLICIES, WE NEED PROGRAMS AND MOST IMPORTANTLY,

WE DO NEED PARTNERSHIPS AS WELL. WE NEED PARTNERSHIPS AND WE

NEED -- ALL NEED TO BE STRENGTH BASED, THEY ALL NEED TO BE BASED

ON EQUITY, BASED ON SCIENCE, AND THEN ALSO BASED ON STORIES AND

STRENGTH AND ALSO ON INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE JUST SO BRAVE IN TELLING

THEIR STORIES. I THINK EVEN WITH ALL THESE

NUMBERS, WITH ALL THESE GREAT PROGRAMS, I THINK IT'S JUST --

IT'S DEPENDENT ON THE INDIVIDUAL, AND JUST, AGAIN,

THANK YOU, LEAH, FOR SHARING YOUR AMAZING STORY.

THANK YOU. [APPLAUSE]

>> GOOD MORNING. IT IS A SHAMEFUL SITUATION WHEN

ONE IS BORN IN POVERTY AND THEN TO DIE IN POVERTY.

IT IS SHAMEFUL TO HAVE NO CHOICE IN LIFE OTHER THAN THE DAILY

EXISTENCE OF KNOWING AND ENCOUNTERING DISCRIMINATION,

PREJUDICE, SEXISM AND RACISM. AND THAT WAS SO ELOQUENTLY

PRESENTED TO ME IN A LECTURE BY A WONDERFUL LADY, DENISE

RODGERS, AT RUTGERS UNIVERSITY. THE REALITY OF INEQUALITY WITH

THE ROOTS OF CONSCIOUS AND UNCONSCIOUS BIAS IS A BEHAVIOR

WHICH NOT ONLY CREATES BUT MAINTAINS INJUSTICE, THE HUMAN

SHAME IS THAT THESE INEQUITIES OCCUR IN A COUNTRY WHICH BOASTS

GREAT GLOBAL POWER AND WEALTH YET CONTINUOUSLY, CONTINUOUSLY

FALLS SHORT IN THE RESPONSIBILITY AND

ACCOUNTABILITY FOR PEOPLE RESIDING IN OUR OWN LANDS HAD.

THE GAP IN CARRIED FORWARD IN MINORITIES WITH ADDICTION IS A

MERE REFLECTION OF THE GREATER REALITY OF RACISM, SEXISM AND

DISCRIMINATION WHICH EXISTS IN THE UNITED STATES.

THE INTENT OF THIS PRESENTATION THAT I INTEND TO DO IS TO

HIGHLIGHT POTENTIALLY GREAT SOLUTIONS WHICH WILL REDUCE

MEDIOCRE IMPACT DUE TO THE NEED OF ADDRESSING SOCIAL

DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH WHICH INCLUDE EDUCATION, EMPLOYMENT,

HOUSING, FINANCIAL STABILITY. IT IS BOLD AND CLEAR THAT UNTIL

THESE MATTERS ARE RECONCILED, OUR COUNTRY WILL WEAR THE BADGE

OF SHAME. AND CONTINUE TO PAY THE PRICE OF

HIGH COST, HIGH MORBIDITY AND HIGH MORTALITY, BUT AS A

CLAIMANT OF LEADERSHIP AND HAVING THAT LEADERSHIP STATUS,

LEADERS CAN BE PART OF THE PROBLEM OR WE CAN BE PART OF THE

SOLUTION. TYPICALLY NOT BOTH.

IT'S MY DESIRE TO BE THAT OF A BRAZEN SOLUTION, BOLD, AND

WITHOUT SHAME. I COME JUST AS YOU DO TO RISE TO

THE PURPOSE OF THIS EVENT WHICH IS TO PREVENT STRATEGIES FROM

THE MEDICAL PERSPECTIVE TOWARDS SOLUTIONS FOR THE OPIOID CRISIS

CHALLENGING THE MINORITY COMMUNITY.

I'M GOING TO MOVE FORWARD. I'M A FAMILY PHYSICIAN OF 26

YEARS IN A RURAL COMMUNITY IN HOPE COUNTY, RAEFORD, NORTH

CAROLINA. SO I MADE A PROMISE.

JUST AS MANY OF MY COLLEAGUES HAVE.

THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, THE AMERICAN

ACADEMY OF FAMILY PHYSICIANS, AMSTA, THERE ARE SEVERAL OTHERS

THAT I'M PAYING MEMBERSHIP TO. WE MADE A COMMITMENT, WE MADE A

PROMISE, AND A IN COLLABORATIONS ADDRESSING THE OPIOID EPIDEMIC.

SO HOW ARE WE GOING TO DO THIS, AND HOW ARE WE ASKING YOU TO

ASSIST US? THAT IS TO RAISE THE AWARENESS

OF THE OPIOID USE, MISUSE AND ABUSE IN ALL COMMUNITIES.

BUT WE MUST APPLY THE CULTURAL LENS FOR RECOGNIZING SOCIAL

DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH TO ACHIEVE EQUITY AND HEALTHCARE

REALIZING THE EXISTENCE OF SYSTEMATIC PREJUDICE, RACISM,

SEXISM AND DISCRIMINATION. BUT AS A PHYSICIAN, AN ADVISER,

AS GIVER OF CARE, INFORMATION FOR OUR PATIENTS, OUR FAMILIES,

HEALTHCARE, SERVICE PROVIDERS, COMMUNITY LEADERS, LAW

ENFORCEMENT, JUDICIAL AND LEGISLATIVE AUTHORITIES, ALL OF

WHICH, ALL OF THESE INDIVIDUALS, ALL OF THESE ORGANIZATIONS ARE

DEALING WITH PEOPLE WHO ARE DEALING WITH SUBSTANCE USE

DISORDER. BUT WE MUST REMEMBER, THIS

COUNTRY HAS ALSO MADE INITIATIVES TOWARDS ADDRESSING

THE AIM OF QUALITY, ACCESS, EFFICIENT AND COST SAVINGS BY

IMPLEMENTING REALISTIC STRATEGIES, AND WE WANT TO SHARE

WHAT IT IS THAT'S WORKING IN OUR COMMUNITIES WHETHER IT'S THAT OF

BALTIMORE OR RAEFORD, NORTH CAROLINA.

SO WHAT ARE WE DOING? THIS IS WHAT WE CONSIDER TO BE

OUR HIGH IMPACT PROJECTS. THERE ARE OTHERS, BUT THESE ARE

THE ONES I'M GOING TO TALK ABOUT.

THE PRESCRIBER PREVENTIVE INITIATIVE, BUT WE'RE TALKING

ABOUT WITHOUT PUTTING ARBITRARY QUANTITY LIMITS IN TERMS OF WHAT

DOCTORS AND PRESCRIBERS ARE ABLE TO DO.

LET US MAINTAIN THE PHYSICIAN-PATIENT RELATIONSHIP

THAT, PROVIDER RELATIONSHIP, BUT YET WE STILL MUST RECOGNIZE HOW

WE ARE PRESCRIBING. WE WANT TO HAVE INTEROPERABLE,

SECURE NATIONAL DATABASE FOR EFFECTIVE STATE PRESCRIPTION

DRUG MONITORING PROGRAMS. WHAT DOES THAT MEAN?

WE WANT TO BE ABLE TO HAVE THAT INFORMATION IN TERMS OF WHO'S

RECEIVING, WHO HAS GIVEN OUT PRESCRIPTIONS FOR THOSE

SUBSTANCE AS, BUT WE NEEDED TO GO ACROSS STATE LINES.

NOT JUST IN NORTH CAROLINA. YES, I CAN DO A MULTISTATE CHECK

BUT ONLY IN THOSE STATES AROUND ME.

I NEED TO BE ABLE TO CHECK CALIFORNIA AND EVERYWHERE ELSE

TOO. WE NEED ADEQUATE FUNDING FOR

ADDICTION TREATMENT INCLUDING COMMUNITY-BASED MEDICATION

ASSISTED TREATMENT PROGRAMS. I AM A DATA EX-WAIVERED

PHYSICIAN, I DO HAVE MEDICATION ASSISTED TREATMENT IN MY OFFICE.

I'M CURRENTLY TAKING CARE OF 60 PATIENTS, AND I WOULD LIKE TO

SAY, ONE AFRICAN-AMERICAN FEMALE, ONE AFRICAN-AMERICAN

MALE, AND SEVERAL NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN, AND THAT'S IT,

OUT OF MY TOTAL OF 60. COORDINATION OF CARE AND

SERVICES OF POPULATIONS INCLUDING THE AGED.

I CAN TELL YOU, I HAVE OLDER PEOPLE, I HAVE SENIORS OVER THE

AGE OF 75 WHO ARE DEALING WITH THIS PROBLEM.

I HAVE DISABLED PEOPLE, PEOPLE WHO HAD INJURIES THAT EITHER WAS

NOT BY THEIR OWN FAULT BUT OCCURRED.

WE HAVE VETERANS. I'M 20-MILES SOUTH OF FORT

BRAGG, ONE OF OUR LARGEST MILITARY INSTALLATIONS IN THIS

COUNTRY, AND WE DO SERVE OUR VETERANS.

WE HAVE WOMEN, WE HAVE CHILDREN, WE HAVE INCARCERATED.

YET THEY ARE NOT RECEIVING SERVICES.

OR LESS THAN ADEQUATE SERVICES. AND THEN QUITE FRANKLY, WE HAVE

SOCIAL AND ECONOMICALLY DISENFRANCHISED PEOPLE.

I WORK WITH A COMMUNITY-BASED ORGANIZATION IN FAYETTEVILLE AND

I CAN TELL YOU THEY REACH OUT TO PEOPLE UNDER THE BRIDGES.

PEOPLE WHO DO NOT HAVE ZIP CODES.

SO HOW DO THEY FIT INTO OUR DATA?

BUT YOU KNOW, WE HAD TO COME UP WITH A STRATEGY IN OUR

COMMUNITY. WE'RE JUST A LITTLE TOWN

SOMEWHERE IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.

AND WHEN THE HEARTS COME TOGETHER, WHEN ENOUGH IS ENOUGH,

WE CAME TOGETHER. WE ACTIVELY ENGAGED PARTICIPANTS

WITH THE SHARED GOAL TO DECREASE ILLNESS AND DEATH FOR ALL PEOPLE

IN THE REGION. AND WE COMMUNICATE ON THOSE

ACTIVITIES, SUCH AS WE HAVE DRUG TAKEBACK DAY.

I SAW THE SIGN IN THE LOBBY AND I'M GREATLY ENCOURAGED.

WE'RE WORKING ON NEEDLE SYRINGE EXCHANGE PROGRAMS.

WE WOULD LIKE TO HAVE A DRUG COURT IN OUR COMMUNITY,

FAYETTEVILLE HAS DONE QUITE WELL AND HAS RECEIVED RECOGNITION FOR

THEIR PROGRAM. PEER COACHING TRIALS.

WE HAVE INDIVIDUALS IN OUR COMMUNITY THAT ARE READY BUT

THEY NEED TO HAVE THAT ACCESS AND THE TRAINING NECESSARY FOR

THAT. BUT YOU KNOW, WE HAVE TO

RECOGNIZE, WHAT ARE WE DEALING WITH AND I'VE ALREADY ADDRESSED

A LITTLE BIT THE CHALLENGES RELATED TO PEOPLE, PLACES AND

THINGS. WHEN I HAVE INDIVIDUALS COME

INTO MY OFFICE, THEY ALREADY HAVE ON THEIR CELL PHONES TEXT

MESSAGES AND THEY ALREADY HAVE THE SPEED-DIAL, THEY KNOW WHERE

TO GET THEIR NEXT HIT. AND SO PEOPLE, PLACES AND

THINGS, FOLKS WHO ARE ADDICTED KNOW WHAT THAT MEANS.

AND YOU NEED TO KNOW WHAT THAT MEANS.

WE NEED TO BE ABLE TO CHANGE THOSE SITUATIONS FOR THOSE

INDIVIDUALS SO THAT THOSE PEOPLE, THOSE PLACES, THOSE

THINGS ARE PEOPLE WHO CAN HELP THEM, NOT HURT THEM.

AND WE HAVE TO WORK TOGETHER TO CREATE SOLUTIONS.

IT'S A SHARED RESPONSIBILITY AND IT'S A SHARED ACCOUNTABILITY.

ALL OF US IN THIS ROOM, ALL ACROSS THIS COUNTRY, IT'S

SHARED. WHEN WE START TO SEGMENT ANY

GROUP, POPULATION OR PROFESSION AND SAY OH, THEY WERE THE CAUSE,

THEY WERE THE BLAME. IT'S SHARED.

THAT IS THE ATTITUDE AND APPROACH WE TEND TO TAKE,

SHARED. AND WE'RE GOING TO ALSO MAKE

SURE THAT WE ARE ADDRESSING THE SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH

BECAUSE IT'S HAVING AN IMPACT GREATER THAN WHAT WE SEE IN

OPIATE USE DISORDER, IT'S HAVING AN IMPACT IN HEALTHCARE

DELIVERY. BUT SMALL STEPS OF CHANGE WILL

LEAD TO A HEALTHIER AND HAPPIER COMMUNITY.

WE KNOW WE CAN'T MAKE A DIFFERENCE OVERNIGHT.

BUT WE KNOW IF WE CAN TAKE THAT SMALL STEP AND START LOOKING IN

THAT DIRECTION, WE WILL GET TO WHERE WE NEED TO BE.

SO HERE WE R THE DOCTOR TALKING ABOUT DATA.

WHAT DO WE DO IN TERMS OF REACHING BEYOND HOPE, OUR NEXT

STEP? OUR LITTLE COMMUNITY GROUP IN

HOPE COUNTY IS CALLED HOPE IN HOKE.

IMPLEMENTATION OF TOOLS FOR DATA AGGREGATION, ANALYTIC,

UTILIZATION, ARE WE MAKING A DIFFERENCE?

AM I MAKING A DIFFERENCE WITH THE 60 FOLKS IN MY OFFICE?

IS IT REALLY WORKING OR AM I ACTUALLY ADDING TO THE RELAPSE

AND RECIDIVISM DEATHS OCCURRING THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY?

ARE WE MAKING A DIFFERENCE? SO HOW DO WE DO THIS?

WE ACTUALLY WANT TO MAKE SURE THAT WE'RE EXPANDING OUR FUNDING

SOURCES. BUT APPROPRIATELY APPLYING THE

FUNDING. ARE MAKING SURE THAT MONEYS THAT

WE'RE SPENDING, THAT IT'S MAKING A DIFFERENCE.

AND WELCOME NEW PARTNERS. I HAD THE OPPORTUNITY OF MEETING

ONE OF THE COMMANDERS OF THAT LARGE INSTALLATION IN NORTH

CAROLINA AND THAT PARTNER SAID TO US, I HAVE A LOT OF DATA, AND

I SAID OUR GROUP NEEDS DATA. I SAID LET'S PUT OUR HEADS

TOGETHER AND SEE WHAT WE CAN DO TO IDENTIFY AND MAKE A

DIFFERENCE. CROSS-CULTURAL PATIENT

ENGAGEMENT. WE HAVE MULTIPLE DIFFERENT

POPULATIONS THAT RESIDE IN OUR AREA, AS MANY OF YOU DO IN THE

AREAS THAT YOU LIVE IN. AND WE NEED TO MAKE SURE THAT

THE APPROACHES THAT WE APPLY HELP EVERYONE.

ON THEIR LEVEL. BASED ON THEIR CULTURE.

WE WANT TO EXPAND ACCESS TO HEALTH AND MENTAL CARE ALLOWING

EVERY PERSON TO HAVE A FAMILY DOCTOR.

I'M A LITTLE SHAKY THIS MORNING BECAUSE I WAS SITTING IN THE

EMERGENCY ROOM AT 2:00 THIS MORNING WITH SOMEONE WHO WAS

HAVING A MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS. IF WE HAD OUR BEHAVIORAL HEALTH

CO-LOCATION, WHICH WE HAVE IN OUR OFFICE DOWN IN NORTH

CAROLINA, WE DIDN'T HAVE THAT HERE IN THE STATE OF MARYLAND IN

THE LITTLE FACILITY THAT I WAS IN, IT'S NOT A LITTLE FACILITY,

BY THE WAY, IT'S A BIG ONE, BUT WE DIDN'T HAVE THAT, AND HOW CAN

WE APPLY THE CHRONIC CARE MODEL, THE BEHAVIOR MANAGEMENT MODEL

WHERE THE HEALTHCARE INDIVIDUAL IS REACHING OUT TO THE PATIENT,

MAKING SURE THEY HAVE WHAT THEY NEED BEFORE THE CRISIS OCCURS.

ENGAGE HEALTHCARE POLICY EXPERTISE FOR MAXIMAL ADVOCACY

IN MULTIPLE ARENAS. IN MY TRAVELS, I'VE NET WITH

SOME HEALTHCARE POLICY FOLKS, PARTICULARLY DUKE UNIVERSITY

INDIVIDUALS, HERE IN WASHINGTON, HOW CAN WE ENGAGE THEM AND HELP

US CREATE OUR SOLUTIONS? YOU KNOW, ACHIEVEMENT OF

SUCCESS, THE BEGINNING AND THE END, IT REALLY STARTS WITH

PASSION. DO YOU HAVE THE PASSION FOR

WHAT'S NEEDED? ARE YOU DETERMINED TO DO WHAT'S

A NECESSARY? WE HAVE LIVES AT HAND, WE'RE

LOSING PEOPLE. AND THAT'S NOT WHAT WE'RE ABOUT.

WE'RE KEEPING PEOPLE AND SAVING PEOPLE.

AND I LOOK FORWARD TO WORKING WITH YOU AND WE DEFINITELY MUST

COLLABORATE. THANK YOU SO MUCH.

[APPLAUSE] >> I WANT TO THANK ALL OF OUR

PANELISTS FOR THEIR EXCELLENT PRESENTATIONS.

CARA IS GOING TO COME UP AND LEAD THE QUESTION AND ANSWER.

>> THANK YOU SO MUCH TO EACH OF YOU.

WHAT WE TRIED TO DO IN THE STORY WE WERE TRYING TO TELL TODAY WAS

TO START WITH WHAT IS THE PICTURE OF THE EPIDEMIC IN THE

COMMUNITIES THAT WE'RE FACING, AND TO TAKE THAT FROM THE DATA

TO THE PERSONAL, AND I THINK LEAH DID AN AMAZING JOB BRINGING

THAT HOME AND YOU HOW THAT IMPACTS REAL PEOPLE.

AND THEN TO TALK ABOUT WHAT IS IT THAT WE'RE DOING, AND IT

LEADS INTO OUR CONVERSATION ABOUT WHAT WE CAN DO AND WHERE

THERE ARE SUCCESSES AND WHAT IS IT THAT WE STILL NEED TO HAVE

DONE. AND SO WE HAVE SOME MICS THAT

ARE HERE IN THE ROOM. WE ALSO HAVE SOME QUESTIONS THAT

YOU CAN SUBMIT TO QUESTIONS AT HHS.TV AND WE'VE HEARD A NUMBER

OF THINGS, AND SO I WANT TO START WITH THE CONVERSATION AS

WE WORK THE MICS AROUND, IF YOU HAVE A QUESTION HERE IN THE

ROOM, PLEASE RAISE YOUR HAND AND WE'LL HAVE A MIC THAT COMES TO

YOU. AND SO THE CONVERSATION IS WE

WANT TO START -- I KIND OF WANT TO TALK ABOUT SOMETHING THAT WAS

MENTIONED BY ALL OF YOU AND THAT'S STIGMA, SORT OF ONE OF

THE QUESTIONS WE RECEIVED, I THINK IT WAS DIRECTED A LITTLE

BIT TO YOU, LEAH, IN PARTICULAR IS, HOW DO WE ENCOURAGE MORE

PEOPLE TO SHARE THEIR STORY? DR. ADAMS TALKED ABOUT THAT.

SO THAT WE'RE UNDERSTANDING AND BEING ABLE TO LIFT THAT UP SO WE

CAN HELP BREAK DOWN SOME OF THOSE BARRIERS RELATED TO THE

STIGMA BUT ALSO HELPING PEOPLE UNDERSTAND IT IS A DISEASE.

SO IF EACH OF YOU WANT TO START AND SORT OF ANSWER THAT, MAYBE

START WITH YOU, LEAH, IF YOU HAVE A THOUGHT ABOUT HOW WE DO

THAT. >> I THINK IT'S THROUGH

STORYTELLING. I THINK WE'RE CONCERNED ABOUT

THE NUMBERS BUT I THINK IT TAKES AWAY THE PEOPLE WHO EXPERIENCE

ADDICTIONS THAT PEOPLE SEE NUMBERS BUT THEY DON'T SEE A

SPACE, AND A REAL LIVE PERSON IS GOING THROUGH THIS, PEOPLE ARE

STRUGGLING, AND PEOPLE ARE MAKING BAD DECISIONS, PEOPLE ARE

FACED WITH THE STRUGGLE. I THINK WE TAKE THAT AWAY

BECAUSE WE'RE UP HERE AND PEOPLE ARE DOWN HERE, AND WE

DON'T BRING PEOPLE UP HERE, AND SO THE PROCESS IS DEHUMANIZING

OF THE SITUATION. YOU TALK ABOUT NUMBERS, BUT

TALKING ABOUT WHAT DEFINES AN EPIDEMIC OF THIS CERTAIN AMOUNT

OF PEOPLE HAVE TO DIE, BUT WHAT ABOUT THE PEOPLE WHO ALREADY

DIED, DO THEIR LIVES NOT MATTER, DO THEIR STORIES -- ARE THEIR

STORIES SIGNIFICANT ENOUGH, AND I THINK TO END THE STIGMA, WE

HAVE TO CONNECT THE TOP AND THE BOTTOM TOGETHER TO SHARE

STORIES. [APPLAUSE]

>> I THINK THE LANGUAGE WE USE, I THINK ABOUT IN MEDICINE HOW

SOMETIMES WE'LL USE SUBSTANCE ABUSE OR -- INSTEAD OF SAYING A

PERSON WITH SUBSTANCE USE DISORDER, WE'LL SAY ADDICT

INSTEAD, AND SO JUST THE LANGUAGE THAT WE USE FIRST AND

FOREMOST AS LEAH HAS PUT THIS, IS AN INDIVIDUAL, IT'S A MOM,

IT'S A DAD, IT'S A NEIGHBOR, IT'S YOUR NEXT DOOR NEIGHBOR,

AND SO I THINK JUST HIGHLIGHTING THIS IS A PERSON AND ALSO THAT

THIS IS A DISEASE AS WELL. >> THIS IS SOMETHING FROM A

HEALTHCARE POLICY PERSPECTIVE, THINKING ABOUT HOSPITALS AND

HEALTHCARE SYSTEMS, AND AMOUNT OF TIME THAT PRIMARY CARE

PROVIDERS AND MENTAL HEALTH PROFESSIONALS HAVE WITH PATIENTS

WITH SUBSTANCE USE DISORDER IS SHORT, IS WAY TOO SHORT.

SO IT MAKES IT THAT THE PROVIDER HAS TO USE THEIR ASSUMPTIONS AND

IN THAT SHORT AMOUNT OF TIME, THEY'RE GOING TO MAKE A LOT OF

MISTAKES BASED ON THEIR OWN EXPERIENCE BUT MAYBE BASED ON

WHERE THEY WERE RAISED AND BASED ON THEIR ASSUMPTIONS ABOUT THE

PEOPLE WHO ARE IN FRONT OF THEM. SO IF THERE ARE WAYS TO IMPROVE

THOSE ASSUMPTIONS, IMPROVE THAT AMOUNT OF TIME, TO MAKE IT SO

THAT A REAL CONSIDERATION IS HAPPENING AS OPPOSED TO, O I

KNOW WHO YOU ARE, I'M GOING TO TREAT YOU THIS WAY, THAT KIND OF

THING NEEDS TO HAPPEN, THAT KIND OF TRAINING, THAT KIND OF

SPECIALIST THAT CAN COME IN THAT UNDERSTANDS THERE'S A HISTORY, A

LONG INTERGENERATIONAL EXPERIENCE WITH DISCRIMINATION,

THAT THAT'S THERE WITH THAT PATIENT, NOT JUST SOMEONE THAT

YOU HAVE A PICTURE IN YOUR MIND OF WHO THAT PATIENT IS.

>> I WOULD LIKE TO ECHO THAT BECAUSE WHAT WE ARE SOMEWHAT

ALLUDING TO IS THAT OF UNCONSCIOUS BIAS, AND ONCE WE

LOOK WITHIN OURSELVES, AND WE LOOK AT OUR OWN ISSUES, AND WE

ALSO RECOGNIZE THAT THOSE WHO ARE COMING IN WITH PROBLEMS

PARTICULARLY FROM THE PHYSICIAN STANDPOINT TO LOOK AT THEM AS A

HUMAN, TREAT THEM AS SUCH. AND THAT'S ONE THING THAT WE

HAVE ATTEMPTED TO DO WITH CO-LOCATION OF TREATMENT AND

THERAPIES IN OUR OFFICE, WHETHER THEY HAVE HYPERTENSION,

DIABETES, WE'RE GOING TO TREAT IT.

AND IF IT'S A SUBSTANCE USE DISORDER, WE'RE GOING TO TREAT

IT. SO THERE'S NO SPECIAL LABEL.

THERE'S A PROBLEM, WE'RE GOING TO TREAT IT.

>> HI, EVERYONE. THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR YOUR

PRESENTATION. I JUST HAD -- MY NAME IS NICOLE,

I WORK AT THE JUSTICE CENTER WITH A NUMBER OF LAW ENFORCEMENT

AGENCIES AROUND THE COUNTRY WHO ARE DOING WORK IN POLICE MENTAL

HEALTH COLLABORATION. I'M HAPPY TO HEAR THAT BALTIMORE

IS ADAPTING THE LEAD PROGRAM. I JUST WANT TO GET A BETTER

UNDERSTANDING OF WHAT TRAINING IS BEING PUT IN PLACE FOR LAW

ENFORCEMENT TO HAVE A BETTER RESPONSE, AND FOR A MORE

EFFECTIVE LEAD PROGRAM. >> THAT'S A GREAT QUESTION, AND

I MAY HAVE TO GET BACK TO YOU ON THAT ONE FOR THE SPECIFIC

TRAINING THAT THEY'RE INCORPORATING.

AT THE HEALTH DEPARTMENT IN GENERAL WE'VE BEEN TRAINING

EVERYONE IN TRAUMA INFORMED CARE AS WELL, AND SO WE'VE BEEN

PARTNERING WITH SAMHSA, AND WITH THESE TRAININGS, I THINK FOR ME,

IT BRINGS ME BACK TO THE CLINICAL SETTING, MORE SO IN

TERMS OF WHEN YOU HAVE A PATIENT COME IN, SOMETIMES YOU'RE -- AND

I'VE BEEN THERE WHERE YOU FEEL FRUSTRATED BUT YOU DON'T KNOW

WHERE THAT PATIENT HAS BEEN, INSTEAD OF SAYING WHAT'S WRONG

WITH YOU, IT'S SORT OF ASKING WHAT HAS HAPPENED WITH YOU.

SO THE HEALTH DEPARTMENT HAS BEEN TRAINING NOT ONLY LAW

ENFORCEMENT BUT AS WELL AS SCHOOLS, AS WELL IN TERMS OF THE

CHANGING OF THE FRAMEWORK OF HOW YOU'RE VIEWING INDIVIDUALS AND

YOU'RE VIEWING THEM AS INDIVIDUALS, INDIVIDUALS WITH

EXPERIENCE AND BACKGROUND. >> THANK YOU, I'LL FOLLOW UP

WITH YOU AS WELL. JUST WANTED TO MENTION A COUPLE

OTHER INITIATIVES THAT ARE HAPPENING HERE IN MARYLAND AND

AROUND THE COUNTRY. THERE'S -- ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY

IS DOING WHERE THEY HAVE FIRE DEPARTMENTS AND LAW ENFORCEMENT

AGENCIES THAT ARE OPEN TO INDIVIDUALS WHEN THEY'RE READY

TO SAY I NEED HELP, WHICH IS REALLY IMPORTANT.

WE HAVE SOME AGENCIES AS WELL THAT HAVE EMBEDDED CLINICIANS IN

THEIR AGENCIES FOR SUBSTANCE USE LIAISON AND ALSO PEER SUPPORT

STAFF AS WELL, SO JUST THANKS TO CONSIDER AS WE GO FORWARD.

>> I MIGHT MENTION, IF IT'S OKAY, I MIGHT MENTION TWO

PROGRAMS THAT ARE HAPPENING IN CAMBRIDGE THAT I'M INVOLVED IN.

ONE IS THE SAFETY NET YOUTH INITIATIVE, WHICH IS A DIVERSION

PROGRAM FOR YOUTH INSTEAD OF GOING INTO THE PRISON SYSTEM OR

THE JAIL SYSTEM GETTING MENTAL HEALTH TREATMENT AT CAMBRIDGE

HEALTH ALLIANCE. SO THAT'S WORTH LOOKING UP, BUT

RELATED TO TRAINING, FOR ADULTS, THERE'S KIND OF A TWO PRONGED

STRATEGY AT CAMBRIDGE POLICE DEPARTMENT.

ONE IS TRAIN ALL THE OFFICERS, ESPECIALLY THE PATROL OFFICERS

ON HOW TO CALM THE TEMPERATURE, HOW TO COOL THE TEMPERATURE WHEN

THEY'RE ENCOUNTERING SOMEBODY WHO MAY BE HAVING PSYCHOTIC

EPISODE OR SOME ISSUE AT THE INTERSECTION OF SUBSTANCE USE

AND MENTAL HEALTH PROBLEMS. AND THAT'S A 40-HOUR TRAINING,

NATIONAL ALLIANCE FOR MENTAL ILLNESS IS HELPING US THINK

ABOUT WHAT THAT 40-HOUR TRAINING IS.

I THINK THERE'S A LOT TO DO ON MAKING THAT TRAINING WORK.

40 HOURS OF POLICE OFFICERS LISTENING TO PEOPLE TALK AT THEM

IS NOT NECESSARILY HELPFUL FOR POLICE OFFICERS.

THE SECOND PRONG IS, THERE ARE FOUR MENTAL HEALTH OFFICERS ON

THE CAMBRIDGE POLICE FORCE AND THEIR JOB IS IT FOLLOW UM WITH

PEOPLE WHEN THERE'S BEEN AN INSTANCE OR A PATROL CALL THAT'S

SOMEWHAT RELATED TO MENTAL HEALTH.

THOSE ARE REAL SPECIALISTS, THOSE ARE OFFICERS WHO ARE

TRAINERS THEMSELVES AND THEY'VE HAD NOT 40 HOURS BUT DAYS AND

DAYS, ENCOUNTER, ENCOUNTERS, AND REAL EXPERTS ABOUT HOW TO NOT

ONLY BE POLICE OFFICERS AND SECURE ARE IN MAKING SITUATIONS

SAFE BUT THEN ALSO HOW TO INTERACT WITH PEOPLE.

I FEEL LIKE THAT KIND OF SPECIALIST IS SOMETHING WE DON'T

TALK ABOUT ENOUGH. BUT ENDS UP BEING REALLY

IMPORTANT IN LEAST AT CAMBRIDGE. >> THANK YOU.

>> HI, I WORK WITH A NON-PROFIT, I'M AN AMERICORPS MEMBER.

MY QUESTION IS SINCE WE HAVE A LOT OF PEOPLE IN THE HEALTH

FIELD, HOW DO YOU FEEL THAT MOVING FROM A CULTURAL

COMPETENCY VIEWPOINT TO CULTURAL HUMILITY CAN HELP PRACTITIONERS

BETTER HELP PATIENTS OF COLOR WITH SUBSTANCE ABUSE DISORDERS?

>> THERE'S A LOT OF ACTIVITY THAT'S OCCURRING, PARTICULARLY

WITH THE TRAINING AND TEACHING OF SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF

HEALTH. TYPICALLY IT WAS NOT PART OF OUR

MEDICAL SCHOOL CURRICULUM MANY YEARS AGO, BUT NOW IT DEFINITELY

IS PART OF THAT CURRICULUM. OUR STUDENTS ARE BEING TAUGHT,

BUT THE STUDENTS, IT'S WONDERFUL, RESIDENTS, WONDERFUL,

BUT WE'RE ALSO INSTITUTING PROGRAMS FOR OUR PRACTICING

DOCTORS, OUR SEASON DOCTORS, SO EDUCATION, IT STARTS WITH

EDUCATION AND WE'RE WORKING AGGRESSIVELY TO DO THAT.

>> I ALSO WANT TO MENTION AT THE HEALTH DEPARTMENT, I WAS ABOUT

BE MORE FOR HEALTHY BABES, WE UNDERWENT A FANTASTIC TRAINING,

A 2 1/2 DAY TRAINING, PERHAPS THE BEST TRAINING I HAVE EVER

WENT TO, AND IT SORT OF MADE YOU LOOK AT YOURSELF AND SORT OF

YOUR ORGANIZATION AS WELL, AND SORT OF WHAT OPPRESSION ARE YOU

HOLDING AS WELL AND SO -- AND THAT'S SOMETHING THAT HAS

CHANGED BE MORE FOR HEALTHY BABY STRUCTURES AND LOOKED AT ITSELF

AS AN INITIATIVE AS WELL, AND SO FROM THAT COMMUNITY ADVISORY

BOARD, WHERE MEMBERS ARE BEING PAID, ALSO CHILD CARE IS

PROVIDED AND TRANSPORTATION IS GIVEN AS WELL, AND THAT'S

SOMETHING THAT I WISH AS A MEDICAL STUDENT I HAD GOTTEN

THAT TRAINING AS WELL, BUT THAT'S SOMETHING THAT PERHAPS IN

THE FUTURE THERE WILL BE MORE OPPORTUNITIES AND COLLABORATION

TO HAVE THAT TRAINING OR SOMETHING SIMILAR OF THAT SORT

AS WELL. >> THE GENTLEMAN RIGHT THERE?

>> HOW ARE YOU DOING? MY NAME IS NORMAN CLEMENT.

I OWN A PHARMACY. WE'RE IN FLORIDA.

THE QUESTION I ALWAYS HAVE ABOUT THESE OPIOID CONFERENCES IS

THAT, ONE, I NEVER HEAR TWO THINGS, WHICH OPIOID ARE CAUSING

THE PROBLEMS, AND I THINK IT'S VERY IMPORTANT, AND WHAT DO WE

DO FOR TREATMENT FOR PEOPLE WITH CHRONIC PAIN.

I WANT TO TALK ABOUT DR. SMITH AND I, YOU TALKED ABOUT THE

PRESCRIPTION DRUG MONITORING PROGRAMS THAT ARE EFFECTIVE, BUT

JUST LAST WEEK, THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE OPENED UP A PROGRAM

CALLED APRIS. THIS APRIS PROGRAM ALLOWS US TO

MONITOR EVERYONE. WE'RE REQUIRED TO PUT THEIR

NAME, ADDRESS, PHONE NUMBER, DATE OF BIRTH, AND HOW THEY'RE

MAKING THESE PAYMENTS, WHO'S MAKING THE PAYMENT, WHO'S

PICKING THE PRESCRIPTIONS UP FOR THEM.

AND THAT INFORMATION IS SENT TO THE BUREAU OF JUSTICE, THE

DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, EVERYTHING.

AND I KIND OF WONDER ABOUT THAT IN TERMS OF -- WE TALK ABOUT

THIS FACEBOOK PRIVACY AND THAT SORT OF THING, THAT WHY ARE

PEOPLE'S -- SINCE WHEN HAD HAVE PHARMACIES LIKE MINE BECOME A

PART OF LAW ENFORCEMENT AND PEOPLE ARE REALIZING THAT EVERY

PRESCRIPTION YOU TAKE TO A PHARMACY IS BEING MONITORED BY

THE BUREAU OF JUSTICE, WHICH IS PART OF THE DEPARTMENT OF

JUSTICE HERE IN WASHINGTON, D.C. AND WHAT CONCERNS ME IS THAT

WHEN WE TALK ABOUT PRESCRIPTION DRUG MONITORING PROGRAMS, AND IF

I'M LISTENING WITH A THIRD EAR, IT SAYS NOTHING ABOUT THESE ARE

CONTROLLED MEDICATIONS. I MEAN, WHAT ELSE CAN YOU PUT ON

THERE? CAN YOU PUT BIRTH CONTROL PILLS

ON THERE? SO WE'RE MONITORING EVERYONE'S

PRESCRIPTION, AND PEOPLE ARE GETTING UPSET HERE ABOUT, YOU

KNOW, FACEBOOK GETTING INFORMATION.

THIS INFORMATION IS GOING TO THE POLICE DEPARTMENT.

SO THAT'S MY BIGGEST CONCERN ABOUT THAT.

THE OTHER ISSUE, THE DOCTOR TALKED ABOUT, AGAIN, WHICH

OPIOIDS ARE CAUSING THE PROBLEMS?

SOMETIMES I'M WONDERING WHETHER THEY'RE SERIOUS ABOUT THIS,

BECAUSE WE HAD, FOR EXAMPLE, THREE YEARS OR FOUR YEARS AGO

THE WALGREENS COMPANY WAS FINED $83 MILLION FOR DRUG

TRAFFICKING, AND DISPENSING OF CONTROLLED MEDICATION,

OXYCODONE, METHADONE, MORPHINE, THAT SORT OF THING, AND NO ONE

GOES TO PRISON. BUT YET ENFORCEMENT IS BROUGHT

AGAINST THE LITTLE GUYS OR THOSE SORT -- AND THIS MEDICATION THAT

GOT OUT IN THE STREET, THIS -- OF THE PHARMACEUTICAL GRADE, SO

I THINK THAT'S IMPORTANT BECAUSE WE'RE TALKING ABOUT -- WHEN WE

TALK ABOUT OPIOIDS, 82% OF WHAT IS CAUSED, WE SEEM -- IS STILL

HEROIN AND FENTANYL. AND IT SEEMS THAT IT ONLY BECAME

A CRISIS WHEN SOMEBODY SAID IT WAS A CRISIS, WHEN WHITE

FOLKS -- HE HATE TO BRING THAT -- WHEN WHITE FOLKS BEGAN

TO DIE OF THESE -- OF THE HEROIN AND THE FENTANYL.

>> I WOULD LIKE TO RESPOND. AND I WANT TO START MY RESPONSE

OFF WITH KEEPING IN MIND OUR DESIRE FOR COLLABORATION AND

KEEPING IN MIND FOR THE SHARED ACCOUNTABILITY AND SHARED

RESPONSIBILITY. FOR THE FIRST TIME IN YEARS,

WORKING EXTREMELY CLOSELY WITH OUR PHARMACISTS, OTHER THAN

CALLING YOU GUYS AND ASKING YOU WHAT DRUG COMES IN WHAT DOSAGE,

I'M ASKING A WHOLE LOT MORE QUESTIONS.

THE STOP ACT WAS A WONDERFUL PROPOSAL AND PIECE OF

INFORMATION THAT IN OUR STATE WE ARE CERTAINLY GOING AROUND AS

PART OF OUR STATE AND ACTUALLY LECTURING TO PHYSICIANS ALL OVER

SO THAT THE PHYSICIANS AND THE PRESCRIBERS INCLUDING OUR

VETERINARIANS WHO ARE ALSO PRESCRIBING OPIATES, EVERY ONE

OF THOSE PRESCRIBERS KNOW WHAT ARE THESE DRUGS, WHAT ARE THE

PROBLEMS THAT ARE ASSOCIATED WITH IT, AND HOW CAN WE PREVENT

THESE DRUGS FROM BEING MISUSED AND ABUSED.

HAVING SAID THAT, WE ALSO HAVE TO RECOGNIZE, YES, WE DO HAVE

PEOPLE WITH CHRONIC PAIN. AND WE DO HAVE PEOPLE WITH ACUTE

PAIN, BUT WE ALSO RECOGNIZE THAT PERHAPS HOW WE WERE TREATING

CHRONIC PAIN, WERE WE USING ALL OF THE ADJUVANT THERAPIES, WERE

WE LOOKING AT REALLY WHAT WAS THE SOURCE OF THE PAIN?

OR PERHAPS THAT CHRONIC PAIN THAT WAS KEEPING SOMEONE UP AT

NIGHT, WAS THAT A CASE OF INSOMNIA OR A CASE OF PAIN?

SO IT'S AN OPPORTUNITY TO GO BACK AND LOOK AND EVALUATE WITH

OUR PATIENTS. AND HOW ARE WE ACTUALLY

ADMINISTERING ACUTE PAIN MEDICATION?

WHY ARE WE GIVING OUT 20 PILLS OR 20 DAYS' WORTH WHEN ACTUALLY

THREE DAYS MAY BE ENOUGH? SO ALL OF THAT IS PART OF THE

EDUCATION ASSOCIATED WITH THE STOP ACT.

AND EDUCATION AGAIN IS WHERE WE ARE CERTAINLY -- MOST OF OUR

INFORMATION. IN REGARD TO THE CONTROLLED

SUBSTANCE REPORTING SYSTEM, THAT'S PART OF TECHNOLOGY AND

GETTING THAT INTO THE HANDS OF THE PRESCRIBERS HAS BEEN AN

ISSUE BUT IT'S WORKING AND PEOPLE, DOCTORS AND PRESCRIBERS

ARE NOW SEEING THAT THESE MEDICATIONS ARE GOING WHERE THEY

SHOULDN'T BE GOING, THEY'RE ABLE TO IDENTIFY DIVERSION, SO YES,

WE DO NEED OUR LAW ENFORCEMENT COLLEAGUES AS PART OF THAT

SOLUTION. IT IS A SHARED RESPONSIBILITY,

AND SHARED ACCOUNTABILITY. >> I JUST WANTED TO FOLLOW U I

THINK TO ADD TO THAT, THERE'S A SWEET SPOT WHICH YOU'RE RAISING

HERE WHICH WE HAVEN'T QUITE HIT. THERE MAY BE AN OVERREGULATION

OF PAIN MEDICATION, THE EXAMPLE THAT JUMPS TO MY MIND IS

AFRICAN-AMERICANS WITH SICKLE CELL DISEASE HAVE EXTREME PAIN,

AND THOSE CELLS CAN SICKLE IF YOU DON'T REDUCE THAT PAIN.

SO IT WILL GET WORSE AND THEIR LONGEVITY WILL SUFFER.

AND SO GETTING THAT SWEET SPOT RIGHT SO YOU'RE NOT JUST SAYING

WE NEED TO GET PAIN MEDICATION OFF THE MAP AND ONLY DO OTHER

THINGS, YOU'RE GOING TO MISS THOSE FOLKS THAT HAVE PAIN AND

YOU'RE GOING TO KIND OF DOUBLE DOWN ON SOME OF THE

DISCRIMINATION IN PAIN MEDICATION PRESCRIPTION THAT

WE'VE SEEN. SO THAT MEANS THAT TO YOUR

POINT, WE HAVE TO DO A GOOD JOB ABOUT SAYING WHERE IS THE RISK

FOR OPIOID OVERDOSE, WHAT MEDICATION -- I REALLY

APPRECIATED DISTINGUISHING BETWEEN A FENTANYL OVERDOSE AND

OTHER KIND OF OPIOID OVERDOSE, THAT KIND OF DATA NEEDS TO BE

MADE MORE AVAILABLE. GO AHEAD, DR. LINN.

>> I JUST WANT TO SHARE MY EXPERIENCE.

I WENT TO VISIT A CITY IN WEST VIRGINIA, ONE OF THE EPICENTER

OF OUR NATION. THEY FORMED A TEAM CALLED THE

QUICK RESPONSE TEAM, FOUR OR FIVE PEOPLE, SOCIAL WORKER,

MENTAL HEALTH WORKER AND EVERYTHING ELSE.

SURPRISINGLY, THEY WERE ABLE TO REDUCE THE OVERDOSE RATE BY 55%

IN THE EARLY THREE MONTHS OF THIS YEAR.

I'M SURE YOU HAVE ALL SEEN -- THOSE OVERDOSE PEOPLE, USUALLY

THEY ARE BUILDING A BRIDGE SO NOBODY EXCEPT THOSE AT HOME --

THEY DO VERY WELL, ABLE TO RECOVER THEM FROM CONTINUING

OVERDOSE. BEFORE, PEOPLE USUALLY GET

TREATMENT, GO HOME AND COME BACK, GET TREATMENT AGAIN AND GO

HOME AND DIE. THOSE SIGNIFICANTLY REDUCE THE

OVERDOSE INSTANCE. >> WHY DON'T WE TAKE ONE

QUESTION FROM THE FOLKS VIRTUALLY THEN WE'LL COME BACK

TO FOLKS IN THE ROOM HERE. >> I HAVE A QUESTION.

THANK YOU FOR EVERYONE WHO'S SUBMITTING YOUR QUESTIONS

ONLINE. WE HEAR YOU AND WE WILL CONTINUE

TO TAKE THOSE QUESTIONS ONLINE. WE DID GET A QUESTION ABOUT WHAT

CAN WE DO TO SUPPORT TRAINING IN MEDICAL SCHOOLS SO THAT OUR

YOUNG PHYSICIANS AS WELL AS NURSES AND OTHERS PHYSICIAN

ASSISTANTS CAN KNOW WHAT TO DO IN THE COMMUNITY TO WATCH FOR

POTENTIAL MISUSE AND ALSO TO SUPPORT PAIN MANAGEMENT?

>> I CAN ADDRESS THAT. IN OUR OFFICE, FOR EXAMPLE, WE

DO HAVE STUDENTS WHO COME IN AND WE DO HAVE THE MEDICATION

ASSISTED TREATMENT IN OUR OFFICE, AND SO ACTUALLY TEACHING

THE STUDENTS IN A SETTING OF REALITY OF WHAT ACTUALLY OCCURS,

IT IS A DIFFICULT TASK TO INTEGRATE MEDICATION-ASSISTED

TREATMENT IN AN OUTPATIENT PRIMARY CARE OFFICE.

BUT WE FEEL LIKE WE HAVE DONE THIS.

AND SO TEACHING THE STUDENTS AND LETTING THE STUDENTS ACTUALLY

ASSIST WITH THE PATIENT INTAKE, ASK THE QUESTIONS, ASK THOSE

QUESTIONS OF THAT INDIVIDUAL, WHO'S GOING ON, AND WHAT BROUGHT

YOU INTO OUR OFFICE, AND HOW DID YOU START TO USE PILLS TO BEGIN

WITH? HOW DID THIS HAPPEN TO BEGIN

WITH? NOT ONLY DOES IT GIVE THE

STUDENTS AN OPPORTUNITY TO LEARN HOW TO DEVELOP A RAPPORT WITH

PEOPLE WHO ARE PATIENTS, BUT IT ALSO TEACHES THEM HOW DO WE

MANAGE THIS DISORDER OR THIS PROBLEM IN THE CLINICAL SETTING?

AND SO MANY OF THE MEDICAL SCHOOL CURRICULUMS HAVE

INCORPORATED IT, BUT I WOULD SAY THAT THE CLINICAL OUTPATIENT

SETTING AS WELL AS OUR HOSPITAL EMERGENCY ROOM SETTING, SO THE

STUDENTS ARE LEARNING UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF THOSE PHYSICIANS

WHO ARE TRAINING AND LEARNING STRATEGIES FOR MANAGEMENT.

>> I AGREE THAT NEEDS TO BE INCORPORATED INTO THE CURRICULUM

AND ALSO NEEDS TO BE INCORPORATED IN THE CLINICAL

SETTING. IN BALTIMORE CITY, MOST OUT OF

THE 12 HOSPITALS, ABOUT EIGHT OUT OF THE 12, I THINK BY NOW

ARE ACTUALLY OFFERING BUPRENORPHINE INITIATION IN THE

E.D. AND THEY'RE ALSO DOING SCREENING AS WELL, SO THEY'RE

SCREENING UNIVERSALLY, SO HAVING IT ALSO AS PART OF THE WORK FLOW

SO THAT WHEN STUDENTS COME IN, THEY REALIZE THAT TREATMENT --

THAT'S THE DEFAULT, IT'S NOT THE EXCEPTION.

THAT'S REALLY IMPORTANT. >> AT CAMBRIDGE HEALTH ALLIANCE,

WE HAVE SOMETHING CALLED THE CAMBRIDGE INTEGRATED CLERKSHIP,

WHICH IS FOR THIRD YEAR MEDICAL STUDENTS, AND A GROUP OF MEDICAL

STUDENTS REALLY ARE ASSIGNED TO ONLY A HANDFUL OF FAMILIES.

AS PART OF THEIR TRAINING, THEY LEARN ABOUT EVERYTHING THAT'S

GOING ON IN THE FAMILY FOR THOSE PATIENTS THAT HAVE MENTAL HEALTH

PROBLEM OR ANOTHER TYPE OF PROBLEM.

AND THEN THEY BEGIN TO UNPEEL ALL THE LAYERS THAT SUSTAIN THE

ILLNESS IN THAT PATIENT, MAKE IT CHRONIC, MAKE THEM -- AND SEE

THE FAMILIES IN THAT SITUATION. I THINK SOMETHING LIKE THAT

NEEDS TO HAPPEN MORE OFTEN IN MEDICAL TRAINING FOR BOTH

UNDERGRADUATE MEDICAL TRAINING AS WELL AS RESIDENCY AND

FELLOWSHIP. JUST BEING ABLE TO PRESCRIBE

ISN'T ENOUGH, BEING ABLE TO PROVIDE A TREATMENT IN 15

MINUTES ISN'T ENOUGH. YOU HAVE TO HAVE THAT ABILITY TO

ASK QUESTIONS TO PEEL BACK BOTH THOSE LAYERS.

BUT THERE'S NO EXPERIENCE WITH THAT IN MEDICAL EDUCATION, THEN

IT BECOMES DIFFICULT TO DO THAT. >> THANK YOU.

I'M HERE FROM OREGON, WHICH HAS BEEN CALLED THE WHITEST CITY --

PORTLAND OREGON, WHICH HAS BEEN CALLED THE WHITEST CITY IN THE

UNITED STATES, AND AFTER THREE YEARS OF CAMPAIGNING, THE PUBLIC

HEALTH DEPARTMENT THERE HAS FINALLY DECLARED RACISM A PUBLIC

HEALTH ISSUE. WE'RE HAPPENING THE SAME THING

HAPPEN ACROSS THE NATION BECAUSE WE ARE ACTUALLY IN THE SAME

SITUATION THAT THANK YOU DR. COOK FOR BRINGING IT UP, IT

TAKES A LONG TIME WITH THESE PATIENTS, IT TAKES A LONG TIME

TO PEEL BACK THESE LAYERS AS YOU HAVE RECOMMENDED TO DO, WITH

PATIENTS, AND A PART OF MY QUESTION IS TWOFOLD.

NUMBER ONE, IF WE WERE ABLE TO LOOK AT RACISM AS A THREAT TO

PUBLIC HEALTH, DON'T YOU THINK THAT WOULD IMPROVE THE ABILITY

TO USE THIS LENS WHEN WE'RE PRESCRIBING?

AND I APPRECIATED THE GENTLEMAN'S COMMENTS BECAUSE I

HAVE TO LEAVE RIGHT NOW TO SPEAK AT A CONGRESSIONAL HEARING ABOUT

THE CHRONIC PAIN PATIENTS AND THEIR INABILITY TO GET THE

MEDICATION BECAUSE OF THIS EPIDEMIC, WHICH HAS TARGETED

PEOPLE OF COLOR DISPROPORTIONATELY AS WE KNOW

AND SICKLE CELL IS JUST A PART OF THAT.

SO I THINK THAT'S A QUESTION I WOULD HAVE.

ALSO IN THIS PROCESS, AND PSAP IS A GREAT ORGANIZATION, STARTED

ON THE WEST COAST, JUST LET ME INTERJECT, BUT ALSO IN TRYING TO

COMMUNICATE WITH OUR CDC IN ASKING THESE QUESTIONS IN

PRIMARY CARE, IT'S BEEN VERY DIFFICULT FOR US TO GET THE

RESPONSE AND GET THIS BACKING FOR THESE KINDS OF SIMPLE

ADHERENCE OF CDC'S OWN GUIDELINES FOR THE FOUR CRITERIA

THAT CONSTITUTE A THREAT TO PUBLIC HEALTH.

SO MY QUESTION IS, WHAT ROLE DO YOU SEE IN THE POSSIBLE

PROCLAMATION BY CDC THAT RACISM IS A THREAT TO PUBLIC HEALTH,

COULD WE SEE SOME IMPROVEMENT IN THIS EXACT EPIDEMIC THAT WE'RE

SEEING, AS WELL AS THE COMPASSION THAT WE SO APPRECIATE

HEARING ABOUT FROM OUR PANELISTS FOR THOSE PATIENTS IN CHRONIC

PAIN OF WHICH SICKLE CELL IS JUST A SMALL PART.

CAN YOU SPEAK TO THE INSTITUTIONALITY THAT WE NEED TO

BE LOOKING AT, THE CRITERIA, THE PUBLIC HEALTH ISSUE THAT RACISM

HAS PRESENTED IN THIS COUNTRY FOR SO VERY LONG?

CAN SOMEONE SPEAK TO THAT FOR ME, PLEASE?

>> RACISM IS AN ISSUE, AS I STATED, RACISM, SEXISM,

PREJUDICE, IT IS AN ISSUE WHICH IS GOING TO CONTINUE TO BE A

PROBLEM IN REGARD TO OUR ABILITY TO DELIVER HEALTHCARE, AND WE

HAVE TO RECOGNIZE IT AS SUCH, SO WE RECOGNIZE IT.

AND WE MOVE FORWARD AND HOW DO WE ADDRESS IT?

THAT IS WHAT WE ARE CERTAINLY READILY DOING IN TERMS OF

TEACHING OUR STUDENTS AND OUR PRACTICING PHYSICIANS AT ALL OF

OUR HEALTHCARE PROVIDERS IN TERMS OF HOW DO YOU RECOGNIZE

IT, HOW DO YOU ADDRESS IT, HOW DO YOU NOT JUST TURN YOUR EYE OR

LOOK THE OTHER WAY OR SAY I DIDN'T HEAR IT?

ADDRESS IT. I THINK ONCE WE'RE ABLE TO DO

THAT, WE'RE ABLE TO THEN PROVIDE CARE AND BE ABLE TO ACTUALLY SEE

THE OUTCOMES THAT WE'RE LOOKING FORWARD TO.

IN OUR COMMUNITY WHEN WE HAVE THE PATIENT-CENTERED MEDICAL

HOME, EVERY PERSON IN THIS COUNTRY SHOULD HAVE A DOCTOR.

EVERY PERSON IN THIS COUNTRY SHOULD HAVE A DOCTOR.

SHOULD HAVE ACCESS TO A DOCTOR. SHOULD HAVE ACCESS TO A

HEALTHCARE PROVIDER, WHETHER IT'S A NURSE PRACTITIONER OR A

P.A. WHO'S WORKING WITH A DOCTOR.

SO THE PATIENT-CENTERED MEDICAL HOME ALLOWS THAT ENTIRE TEAM TO

TAKE CARE OF THAT INDIVIDUAL. BUT IT ALSO ALLOWS US TO HAVE CO

-LOCATION WITH BEHAVIORAL HEALTH, IT ALLOWS US TO BRING IN

OUR PHARMACY, IT ALLOWS US TO HAVE THE TOTAL COMPREHENSIVE

CARE OF THAT PATIENT, AND THAT INDIVIDUAL RECOGNIZES AND

HUSBAND THE TRUST TO GO TO. SO JUST STARTING THAT

CONVERSATION AND UNDERSTANDING HOW DOES RACISM, SEXISM,

PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION HAVE AN IMPACT, HOW DO WE START

THAT CONVERSATION, AND WE HAVE STARTED THAT CONVERSATION.

>> THANK YOU. SO I'M GOING TO DO REAL QUICKLY

HERE ONE ON THE WEB OR VIRTUAL AND THEN THE GENTLEMAN RIGHT

HERE WHO'S HAD HIS HAND UP FOR A WHILE, THEN WE'RE GOING TO

UNFORTUNATELY CLOSE OUT, I'M GOING TO TURN IT BACK OVER.

SO VERY QUICKLY. >> THANK YOU.

WE'RE GOING TO COLLAPSE TWO QUESTIONS INTO ONE.

ALL OF US HAVE A ROLE TO PLAY, SO THE QUESTION IS, WHAT CAN

FAITH COMMUNITIES DO BY THE TRAININGS AND SUPPORT FOR

CHURCHES AND OTHER FAITH ORGANIZATIONS TO GET INVOLVED,

AND TWO, WHERE DO FAMILIES AND COMMUNITIES GET RESOURCES IF

THEY KNOW THERE'S AN ISSUE WITHIN THEIR FAMILY OR COMMUNITY

TO BE ABLE TO ACCESS SUPPORT? >> I'LL START THEN GIVE IT OFF

TO LEAH. I THINK IN TERMS OF FAITH

COMMUNITIES, REALLY AS WHAT DR. ADAMS PRESENTED A CHALLENGE

OF EVERYONE KNOWING ABOUT NALOXONE, KNOWING HOW TO USE IT

AND HAVING IT ON HAND BECAUSE YOU NEVER KNOW WHEN YOU'RE GOING

TO BE USING IT. THAT'S SOMETHING THAT LEAH HAS

DONE A TREMENDOUS JOB OF, TRAINING SO MANY INDIVIDUALS IN

THE CITY AND THAT'S SOMETHING THAT REALLY EVERYONE CAN DO.

I DON'T KNOW IF THERE'S ANYTHING ELSE YOU WANTED TO ADD TO THAT.

>> IN REGARDS TO FAITH BASED COMMUNITY, MY MOTHER'S RECOVERY,

IT WAS SPIRITUAL TO FIND FORGIVENESS FROM GOD, AND

BREAKING THOSE BARRIERS DOWN IN THE FAITH-BASED COMMUNITY, THAT

IS NOT A MORAL FAILING THAT GOD DOES FORGIVE AND TO OPEN UP

THEIR DOORS FOR MORE PEOPLE TO COMMUNICATE THAT TO THE PASTORS,

THE PRIESTS, AND TO PROVIDE RESOURCES, BY GETTING TRAINING

IN NALOXONE AND TO HAVING NALOXONE IN YOUR PARISH OR YOUR

CHURCHES. I THINK THAT DOES HELP TO SEND A

MESSAGE THAT EVEN IF YOU DON'T WANT TO SAY THAT YOU DO HAVE A

SUBSTANCE USE DISORDER KNOWING THAT THE PLACE THAT YOU GO TO TO

PRAISE GOD OR OTHER SPIRITUAL LEADERS, I THINK, THAT THEY ARE

WITH YOU AS WELL. >> OKAY.

>> THANK YOU. MY NAME IS ENRIQUE, I'M WITH THE

NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE, AND I THINK EVERYBODY

HAS A SHARE OF THIS PROBLEM. I ALSO AM A PHYSICIAN, AND

TALKING ABOUT THE MAIN TOPIC THAT DR. COOK ADDRESSES IS

DOCTORS TODAY DO NOT HAVE TIME TO SEE THE PATIENTS WITH THE

SYMPTOMS, NOT THE PROBLEM. SO FOR THE PAST FEW YEARS, I'VE

BEEN LEARNING ABOUT ALTERNATIVE TREATMENTS FOR PAIN, AND I HAVE

HELPED PEOPLE TO GET OUT OF ADDICTIONS AND CONTROL THEIR

PAIN WITH ACUPUNCTURE, MANY OTHER, YOU KNOW, STATISTICS THAT

CHOSE THAT PAIN CAN BE TREATED DIFFERENTLY.

IN 2012, I GRADUATED AS AN INTEGRATED HEALTH COACH THAT

ALSO EMPOWERS THE PERSON TO CHANGE BAD HABITS TO GOOD

HABITS. AND ALSO WE CAN EVEN USE

HYPNOSIS, CLINICAL HYPNOSIS. HAVE YOU CONSIDERED USING THESE

PROGRAMS FOR UNIVERSITIES? INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE?

>> SO AT CAMBRIDGE HEALTH ALLIANCE, WE HAVE A CLINIC THAT

IS REALLY FOCUSED ON MINDFULNESS BASED INTERVENTIONS WHICH HAS

BEEN SHOWN TO HAVE SOME PRELIMINARY INCREASING EFFECT ON

MEDICATION ASSISTED TREATMENT, THAT THE EFFICACY IMPROVES IF

YOU ALSO HAVE A MODULE OF MINDFULNESS TRAINING.

BUT YOU MENTION A NUMBER OF OTHERS THAT SHOW A LOT OF

PROMISE, AND I KNOW THERE ARE SOME STUDIES GOING ON BUT I

THINK THERE COULD BE A LOT MORE TARGETED WORK BY FUNDERS TO

SUPPORT RESEARCH THAT DOES -- THAT THOSE KIND OF ALTERNATIVE

THERAPIES ALONG WITH MEDICATION GIVEN THE PROBLEM THAT WE HAVE.

I JUST WANTED TO SAY ONE MORE THING ABOUT TIME, AND MAYBE IT'S

NOT NECESSARILY I'M THE PRIMARY CARE PROVIDER WHO HAS 15 MINUTES

AND LOTS OF INSURANCE ISSUES COMING DOWN UPON THEM TO HEAR

THE STORY AND PEEL BACK ALL THE LAYERS.

BUT THERE'S GOT TO BE SOMEONE ON THE MEDICAL CARE TEAM, AND THE

FAITH BASED COMMUNITY HAS TO BE INVOLVED IN THIS TEAM ALSO, SO

WE WORK WITH THE TRANSFORMATION CENTER WHICH IS IN ROXBURY,

WHICH IS EDUCATING PEERS ON HOW TO HELP OTHERS WITH SERIOUS

MENTAL ILLNESS NAVIGATE THE HEALTHCARE SYSTEM.

ONE WOMAN'S STORY WAS THAT IT REALLY TOOK HER 30 MINUTES TO

EDUCATE HER MENTAL HEALTH PROVIDER ABOUT ALL THE RACISM

THAT SHE GREW UP WITH AND EXPERIENCED, AND SHE STARTED HER

LIFE WITH BECAUSE OF THAT INTERGENERATIONAL CUMULATIVE

EXPERIENCE OF RACISM THAT ENDED UP IN HER HOUSE.

AND THEN SHE SUFFERED TRAUMA AND A LOT OF ISSUES GOING THROUGH

HER LIFE. SO SHE NEEDED -- SHE FELT LIKE

SHE NEEDED TO EXPLAIN THAT TO HER PROVIDER FOR 30 MINUTES, SHE

HAD TO COACH HER PROVIDER BEFORE THE PROVIDER COULD THEN PROVIDE

ANY TREATMENT. THAT'S A LOT OF WORK FOR HER AND

SHE HAD REALLY PUT HERSELF OUT THERE AND TAKEN A RISK. SO THAT

MAY BE ON THE PROVIDERS THAT THEY HAVE TO BE ABLE TO UNPEEL

THESE STORIES, BUT IT'S ALSO ON THIS TEAM-BASED APPROACH OR KIND

OF A FULL COURT PRESS THAT INVOLVES THE FAITH BASED

COMMUNITIES AS WELL AS SOCIAL WORKERS AND COMMUNITY HEALTH

WORKERS TO GET THAT STORY SO YOU DON'T SPEND MORE THAN HALF OF

YOUR PSYCHIATRIC VISIT TO GET THE PHYSICIAN TO UNDERSTAND WHAT

YOU'RE TALKING ABOUT. >> THANK YOU FOR THAT, THANK YOU

ALL FOR JOINING US. I'M GOING TO TURN IT BACK OVER

TO LARKE TO CLOSE US OUT AND BEFORE I DO, I JUST WANT TO

AGAIN ADD MY THANKS FOR THE STORIES AND THE INFORMATION THAT

YOU SHARED AND APOLOGIZE FOR THE FACT THAT WE DIDN'T MAKE THIS A

FOUR-HOUR OR SIX-HOUR SESSION BECAUSE WE COULD HAVE HAD A LOT

MORE DISCUSSION, BUT HOPE THAT YOU WILL CONTINUE TO ENGAGE WITH

US AS WE'RE WORKING ON OUR PATH TO HELP EQUITY IN ADDRESSING

OPIOIDS AND OTHER BEHAVIORAL HEALTH NEEDS IN OTHER MINORITY

COMMUNITIES. >> THANKS, CARA.

I ACTUALLY HAD SOME PREPARED REMARKS TO CLOSE THIS OUT, WHICH

I MAY OR MAY NOT GO TO BECAUSE WE'RE REALLY CLOSE TO BEING OUT

OF TIME AND BECAUSE THERE IS SUCH AN INTERESTING DISCUSSION

HERE. YOUR QUESTIONS WERE TERRIFIC AND

I THINK IT REALLY MAKES US THINK ABOUT HOW DO WE DELIVER CARE,

AND WHO DELIVERS THE CARE. I THINK AS BEN WAS SAYING, THERE

IS A TIME ISSUE. AS CARA WAS SAYING, WE TRY TO

INTEGRATE SO MUCH INTO OUR OFFICE VISIT.

WHO ARE THE PARTNERS AND THE PLAYERS, WE'VE USED SO MANY

SPORTS METAPHORS HERE, ON THE FIELD, GET TO THE END ZONE.

I KNOW THAT IN TERMS OF WHAT WE REALLY DO IN HEALTHCARE DELIVERY

PROBABLY ACCOUNTS FOR MAYBE 40% OF HEALTHCARE OUTCOMES AT MOST.

BUT IT'S ALL THOSE OTHER KINDS OF FACTORS GOING ON WHICH HAVE

BEEN REFERRED TO HERE AS SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH, WHICH IS

INCLUSIVE OF RACISM, IS INCLUSIVE OF EXPOSURE TO

VIOLENCE, EXPOSURE TO TRAUMA, AND WHO TAKES CARE OF ALL OF

THAT, WHO IS RESPONSIBLE FOR ALL OF THAT.

AND REALLY IT IS MANY COMMUNE PROVIDERS, IT IS NOT JUST THE

DOCS AND THE PEOPLE IN THE OFFICE VISIT.

AT SAMHSA, WE'VE ACTUALLY SUPPORTED THE LEAD PROGRAM, WE

FIND OUR NEWEST PARTNERS IN THIS WORK ARE NOT JUST LAW

ENFORCEMENT, BUT ARE FIREFIGHTERS.

FIREFIGHTERS ARE SAYING THAT THE WAY THEY'RE BUILDING AND

CONSTRUCTING BUILDINGS NOW, THERE'S SO MUCH FIRE RETARDANT

THAT WE'RE NOT PUTTING OUT AS MANY FIRES SO NOW WE'RE REALLY

LOOKING AT HUMAN INTERACTIONS AND THEY ARE DOING THE NALOXONE

DRUG REVERSALS. AND THEY'RE LOOKING AT OVERDOSE

REVERSALS, THEY'RE LOOKING AT THOSE OVERDOSE OPPORTUNITIES AS

WHAT THEY ARE CALLING AND ARE TEACHING US THAT THESE ARE HOT

MOMENTS. IT'S NOT A MOMENT TO JUST GET

SOMEBODY BACK ON THEIR FEET AGAIN WITH THE INJECTION OF THE

NALOXONE, BUT GETTING THEM INTO TREATMENT, AND WE ARE PARTNERING

WITH LAW ENFORCEMENT TO KEEP PEOPLE OUT OF JAILS AND ACTUALLY

OUT OF EMERGENCY DEPARTMENTS AS WELL.

BECAUSE FOR A POLICE OFFICER TO TAKE SOMEONE TO AN EMERGENCY

ROOM, THAT TAKES THEM OFF THE STREET FOR ABOUT TWO OR THREE

HOURS UNTIL THE PATIENT CAN BE CARED FOR IN THE EMERGENCY ROOM.

SO THEY'RE COMING UP WITH VERY NEW SOLUTIONS LIKE LAZY BOY

SITES OR LIVING ROOM SITES WHICH ARE IN THE HALLWAYS OF THE

EMERGENCY ROOM BUT NOT IN THE EMERGENCY ROOM, WHERE A SOCIAL

WORKER OR COMMUNITY HEALTH WORKER OR PEER SPECIALIST CAN

HELP DEESCALATE THE PERSON AND TREAT THEM BEFORE THEY ACTUALLY

GET INTO THE EMERGENCY ROOM OR BEFORE THEY'RE CYCLED IN AND OUT

OF JAILS. I THINK THE ISSUE OF RACISM

TOTALLY -- VERY MUCH PENETRATES OUR SERVICE DELIVERY SYSTEM AS

WELL. THE ISSUE OF STIGMA, I THINK

WITH NO ASPERSIONS TO OUR PHYSICIANS HERE, BUT THERE ARE

STUDIES THAT HAVE SHOWN AROUND MEN WILL TALL HEALTH ISSUES,

SOMETIMES IT IS PHYSICIANS AND THE MEDICAL PROFESSION THAT HAVE

THE HIGHEST RATES OF STIGMA. HOW OFTEN HAVE YOU HEARD

PEDIATRIC CARE PROVIDERS SAYING TO THE PARENT WHO KNOWS

SOMETHING IS WRONG WITH THEIR CHILD, HE WILL GROW OUT OF IT.

YOU KNOW, NOT KNOWING HOW TO EVEN START THE CONVERSATION.

SO WE WANT TO START CONVERSATIONS AROUND THIS OPIOID

EPIDEMIC WHICH ACTUALLY IN THIS COUNTRY HAS NOW REDUCED THE

AVERAGE LIFE EXPECTANCY OF PEOPLE IN OUR COUNTRY.

IN A SHORT PERIOD OF TIME, IT HAS DOWNGRADED OUR LIFE

EXPECTANCY. WE ALSO REALLY WANTED TO FOCUS

ON IT FOR POPULATIONS OF COLOR. WE KNOW THAT PATHWAYS TO

SUBSTANCE USE, PATHWAYS TO OPIATE USE IN PARTICULAR, ARE

VERY DIFFERENT FOR DIFFERENT POPULATIONS.

AND THE INTERESTING PARADOX AT OUR FORMER CENTER FOR SUBSTANCE

ABUSE TREATMENT DIRECTOR DR. WES CLARKE WOULD SAY, THERE'S A

PARADOX FOR AFRICAN-AMERICANS. IN A SENSE THEY WERE PROTECTED

BY THE FACT THAT THEY CAN'T GET GOOD ACCESS TO CARE AND CAN'T

GET GOOD ACCESS TO PAIN CARE, SO THEY WERE SPARED A LITTLE BIT IN

THE BEGINNING OF THE OPIOID CRISIS.

BUT WE KNOW THAT IT IS CRIMINALIZED FOR PEOPLE OF

COLOR, WE KNOW THAT THE JAILS ARE OVERWHELMED AND

OVERPOPULATED WITH PEOPLE WITH MENTAL HEALTH ISSUES AND LOW

LEVEL DRUG-RELATED CRIMES THAT WE NEED TO DO A BETTER PROCESS

OF DIVERSION OR THINKING HOW DO WE CONCEPTUALIZE IT AS CRIMINAL

BEHAVIOR, WITH CERTAIN POPULATIONS, ESPECIALLY BROWN

AND BLACK POPULATIONS. AND AS AN ADDICTION, AS A

DISEASE FOR OTHER POPULATIONS. SO THE PATHWAYS TO

CRIMINALIZATION, PATHWAYS TO JAIL, PATHWAYS TO TREATMENT

REALLY VARY BY DIFFERENT DIVERSE POPULATIONS.

WE ACTUALLY NEED TO CORRECT THAT.

WE NEED TO LOOK AT UNIVERSAL STRATEGIES THAT WORK FOR ALL

POPULATIONS BUT WE ALSO NEED TO LOOK FOR TARGETED POPULATIONS

FOR SPECIFIC POPULATIONS TO ENSURE THAT WE'RE NOT INCREASING

DISPARITIES. AS KAREN SAID, WE NEED TO LOOK

AT HOW DO WE EXPAND OPTIONS FOR MEDICATION ASSISTED TREATMENT TO

LOW INCOME POPULATIONS, TO WORK WITH COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTERS,

WORK WITH FEDERALLY QUALIFIED HEALTH CENTERS, WORK WITH

COMMUNITY HEALTH WORKERS. WE NEED TO REVISIT OUR DRUG

POLICIES. AND AS PART OF THE FEDERAL

GOVERNMENT, WE'RE VERY MUCH INVOLVED IN SOME OF THOSE DRUG

POLICIES THAT COME OUT FROM OUR DEPARTMENT AND FROM OUR

DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. IT REMAINS A PUBLIC HEALTH

CRISIS AND IT WAS VERY INTERESTING, I THINK SOMEONE WAS

RAISING THE ISSUE OF RACISM AS A PUBLIC HEALTH CRISIS AND AN

ASSAULT ON OUR HEALTH. I THINK WE DO HAVE EVIDENCE FOR

THAT. WE DO KNOW WE CAN LOOK AT

CHRONIC STRESS BROUGHT UPON BY MICRO-AGGRESSIONS OR DAILY

PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION. THERE WAS A LARGE PIECE IN THE

"NEW YORK TIMES" MAGAZINE THIS PAST SUNDAY LOOKING AT

AFRICAN-AMERICAN WOMEN OF ALL SOCIAL CLASSES, AND WHY DO THEY

HAVE SUCH A HIGH RATE OF INFANT MORTALITY/MORBIDITY AND REALLY

LOOKING AT THE CONSTANT WEATHERING OF AN IMMUNE SYSTEM

THAT HAS TO DEAL WITH DAILY ASSAULTS.

SO I WANT TO BRING THIS TO A CLOSE BECAUSE WE CAN GO ON AND

ON, AND I REALLY WANT TO THANK OUR PARTNERS, CARA JAMES AND HER

TEAM AT CMS FOR REALLY HAVING -- INITIATING THIS, ASKING US TO BE

PARTNERS ON IT. I WANT TO THANK OUR PANELISTS,

WE COULD SPEND WEEKS WITH YOU AND WE REALLY COULD HAVE YOU

COME TO OUR AGENCIES AND DO A LOT OF TEACHING FOR US AS WELL.

AND THANK ALL OF YOU WHO ARE ON THE LINE AND ALL OF YOU WHO ARE

PRESENT HERE TODAY. I WANT TO GO BACK TO LEAH'S

QUESTION, SHE SAID SHE KNOWS WHY SHE'S HERE, BUT WE NEED TO THINK

ABOUT WHY ARE WE ALL HERE AND WHAT CAN WE DO IN PARTNERSHIP TO

REALLY ADDRESS THIS DEADLY EPIDEMIC OF OPIOID MISUSE.

SO THANK YOU VERY MUCH FOR PARTICIPATING.

THANK YOU FOR ALL THAT YOU'RE GOING TO GO OUT AND DO TO

ADDRESS THIS CRISIS, AND I THINK WE ARE DONE FOR TODAY.

THANK YOU. [APPLAUSE]

For more infomation >> Forum on Opioids: Strategies and Solutions for Minority Communities - Duration: 1:57:08.

-------------------------------------------

Universal Health Services CEO on removing the stigma of mental illness - Duration: 6:28.

For more infomation >> Universal Health Services CEO on removing the stigma of mental illness - Duration: 6:28.

-------------------------------------------

Welcome to the Deaf Services Team Facebook Page - Duration: 1:12.

For more infomation >> Welcome to the Deaf Services Team Facebook Page - Duration: 1:12.

-------------------------------------------

How can we have the greatest impact - A message for community services - Duration: 2:36.

With smoking rates so much higher among vulnerable and disadvantaged people it's

the community service organisations who work with them on a day to day basis

that can have the greatest impact. The frontline staff who have those trusted

relationships can have a huge influence on people to reduce and quit smoking.

I think it's really important the community service sector gets behind

people quitting smoking because we're not having the success amongst

those who are vulnerable in our community about quitting smoking.

When homeless health care did some research with the Cancer Council we found that

most homeless people were actually interested in quitting and the majority

of them had tried to quit in the last six months. What you find with people who

are experiencing homelessness is they've got so much going on with them in their

lives and so many different stressors to deal with that they tend not to bring up

quitting smoking themselves, so it's really important that we actually ask

the questions to encourage people to talk about quitting smoking.

When you're talking with your client that's a perfect opportunity to raise smoking if

they don't want to talk about it they don't want to talk about it but at least you've

raised it. What's most likely is you'll find that they've been thinking about

quitting for some time. Perhaps they don't know how to do it, perhaps they're

worried. This is your opportunity to help.

Their overall health and wellbeing is something we should be thinking about, not just the

diagnosis they have on the day. It's as simple as three steps: ask, advise and

assist. Asking them if they are a smoker. Advising them that if they quit it'll

benefit their health. And letting them know what services are available if they

want it. Like a doctor, the local AMS or calling Quitline. It's okay if they don't want to

quit at that time, but it's important that we let them know that we are here

for when they are ready, when they need us. Let's aim to give everyone the

opportunity to access accurate information and support. It can be all

that it takes to change someone's life. Let's work together to ensure no one is

left behind. Let's make smoking history for everyone.

Let's make smoking history for everyone. Let's make smoking history for everyone.

Let's make smoking history for everyone.

For more infomation >> How can we have the greatest impact - A message for community services - Duration: 2:36.

-------------------------------------------

Need some help? These libraries offer social services - Duration: 1:48.

For more infomation >> Need some help? These libraries offer social services - Duration: 1:48.

-------------------------------------------

Les services d'accompagnement pour aînés de Bayshore - Duration: 1:09.

For more infomation >> Les services d'accompagnement pour aînés de Bayshore - Duration: 1:09.

-------------------------------------------

Working with S H Block Tax Services: How Long Does the Process Take? - Duration: 1:13.

How long does it take to deal with this?

How willing and how ready are you to work?

How fast do you want to take care of it?

The next thing is, maybe you got into some trouble but you are all filed with your tax returns

If your tax returns are filed, that's the whole second step.

That eliminates that whole process.

You know, sometimes someone has a license that they need released.

And I've seen dad sit on the phone with them in the office, not even power of attorney yet,

and say, "I have so and so in the office and get their licensed released."

A lady came from up the street at the old office.

And she worked for an attorney and came down to Dad.

He got her, her license within an hour on the phone.

Other things like Offer in Compromise take a year, around a year.

It's better if it takes longer sometimes because a quick answer is usually a quick no, you're

denied. But the longer processes can take a year.

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét